2025 ISP Critical Studies Symposium
Sun, May 18, 2025
2–5:30 pm
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This event is free but registration is required.
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The Susan and John Hess Family Theater is equipped with an induction loop and infrared assistive listening system. Accessible seating is available.
ASL interpretation will be provided.
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Theater
This ISP 2025 Critical Studies Symposium features seven participants from the Whitney Independent Study Program: including six Helena Rubinstein Fellows from the Critical Studies Program and one Weitzen Family Fellow from the Studio Program. Each will present a paper on their current research.
Introductory Remarks: Sara Nadal-Melsió, ISP Associate Director
2 pm
Session 1
2:10–3:50 pm
Genevieve Lipinsky de Orlov, “On the Extra-Institutional”
Stephen Woo, “All of Us Want to Circulate Less”
Iulia Nistor, "given/made"
Sahar Khraibani, “always already in: notes on friction, sublimation and the body”
Respondent: Irene V. Small, Princeton University
Break
3:50–4:05 pm
Session 2
4:05– 5:25 pm
Stella Liantonio, "Daily Abstractions”
Joanna Evans, “Burning Down the House: Ecological Prisons and Abolitionist Architecture”
Adrienne Jacobson Oliver, “Free State”
Respondent: Denise Ferreira da Silva, New York University
Bios:
Joanna Evans (they/them) is a theater artist and performance scholar from Cape Town, South Africa. Their research focuses on improvisational performance and histories of black environmentalism, while their creative practice is organized around devised theater and collective inquiry. Their scholarship appears in TDR: The Drama Review, Women&Performance: a journal of feminist theory, Performance Research, and Ecumencia Journal. They are currently completing a PhD in performance studies at New York University and will begin a postdoctoral research fellowship at the University of Virginia’s Carter G. Woodson Institute in the Fall.
Adrienne Jacobson Oliver (she/her) is an artist-researcher living and working in the American South. Through speculative methodologies blending poetry, performance, and visual art, her creative practice addresses how B/blackness articulates itself in vernacular, sensual, and sonic anarrangements. Having trained at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts before studying film and media theory at the University of Virginia, she holds an MFA in Studio Art from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her work has been supported by PEN America, Tin House, Burnaway, the National Endowment for the Arts, and appeared in The Plentitudes, Apogee Journal, Puerto del Sol, and the Virginia Film Festival.
Sahar Khraibani is a writer and artist from Beirut whose work has appeared in Montez Press, The Brooklyn Rail, Magnum Foundation, the Poetry Foundation, and the Poetry Project among many others. Sahar is a recipient of the Creative Capital / Andy Warhol Arts Writers Grant, an Emerge—Surface—Be Fellowship at The Poetry Project, a MacDowell Fellowship, and is a 2024 artist in residence at Mass MoCA. Sahar serves as faculty at Pratt Institute and Brooklyn College. “Anatomy of a Refusal” is forthcoming from 1080PRESS.
Stella Liantonio (they/them) is a writer and freelance curator, whose methodological approach focuses on collaborative practices. Their work has been presented in independent art spaces in Switzerland (Duplex, One gee in fog, Espace eeeh!, FMAC), and Italy (PARSEC Bologna). In 2023, they have been a resident at the MACRO Museum of Contemporary art of Rome. They hold a MA in Critical and Curatorial studies from the University of the Arts of Geneva, Switzerland and a BA in Continental Philosophy from the University of Venice.
Genevieve Lipinsky de Orlov (they/them/none) is an art historian, critic, and editor, and the cofounder and editor of The Public Review, a publication for long-form art criticism. Genevieve is also a PhD candidate at SUNY Stony Brook, researching practices that intervene in art's commodification for an economic history of postwar art.
Iulia Nistor (she/her) is a philosopher and a visual artist from Romania. She holds a Ph.D. from the Department of Theoretical Philosophy at Regensburg University, Germany, and a Meisterschüler from Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main. Her work is situated between philosophy of mind, epistemology, and aesthetics. In her dissertation, she used the paradox of fiction as a perspective tool to analyze the concept of intentionality. Her research has been supported by the Bavarian state, Stiftung Kunstfonds, and the DAAD. The book "properties without objects" is forthcoming.
Stephen Woo (he/him) is a PhD candidate in the department of Modern Culture and Media at Brown University. Starting this Fall, he will be Assistant Professor of Cinema Studies at Marist College. His academic writing on global cinema and film theory has been published or is forthcoming in The Journal for Cinema and Media Studies, New Literary History, and Camera Obscura: Feminism, Culture, and Media Studies.
About the Independent Study Program
Founded in 1968, the Whitney Museum's Independent Study Program (“ISP”) is an experimental study community dedicated to fostering critical thinking, cross-disciplinary scholarship, and multimedia artistic practices. The ISP cultivates a rigorous intellectual environment where Participants are encouraged to engage deeply with contemporary issues through extended conversation and collaboration. Through seminars, reading groups, workshops, screenings, performances, poetry readings, studio visits, and an array of collaborative endeavors, the program nurtures and challenges the creative processes of artists, curators, and scholars who are committed to innovative, sustainable, and activist practices.
ASL interpreters and live captioning will be available online and in-person for this event. If you need captions in a separate browser window or on your own mobile device, please email accessfeedback@whitney.org for StreamText link.
Major support for the Independent Study Program is provided by Joanne Leonhardt Cassullo, the Elaine Graham Weitzen Foundation for Fine Art, the Dorothea L. Leonhardt Foundation, and the Helena Rubenstein Foundation.
Generous support is provided by the Whitney Contemporaries through their annual Art Party benefit.
Additional support is provided by an endowment created by George S. Harris, Gloria H. Spivak, and the Teiger Foundation.