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Wednesday: October 26 3p. Panel: Religious Intolerance and Global Responsibility Religious persecution remains widespread across the world. With extremist groups such as ISIS and Boko Haram ranking amongst the most egregious abusers of religious freedom, how should we respond to such violence and fanaticism, and in ways that do not further engender hate, racisim and xenophobia? Newsletter Signup. Home Main Navigation. Our three-day international film festival that celebrates the talent of filmmakers 22 years old and younger.

Free weekly film series celebrating the richness and diversity of international independent filmmaking. Free screenings for Chicago Public Schools give students access to international, documentary, short, and local films.

Conversation: Dawoud Bey and Gaëlle Morel

Share this page:. New Films at ChiFilmFest. Tribute: Geraldine Chaplin.

Stay Connected Newsletter Signup. Johnson: In my experience, a lot of arts educators make a troubling assumption.

Guerilla Girls in Conversation at Columbia College Chicago

They assume that youth of color want to create art in response to inequitable issues going on in their communities. Based on that assumption, organizations build a curriculum around an issue like crime. But dictating a topic or theme does a disservice to young creatives. As a young artist, you want to improve in your craft.

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The best way to explore your imagination is to be allowed to create freely. The larger systemic issues will come through once young artists have had the opportunity to reflect on their lives. Thinking back on how I was introduced to photography, I learned that I had a passion for street photography because I was allowed to do so.

I cannot imagine what it would have been like if my teacher had told me to think about some issue and create work in response to it. They might want to use art as a place of peace and escape. IFF: Your love of street photography led you to study photojournalism. Why not?


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Johnson: I knew I loved street photography and portraiture. But I started paying attention to how documentary photography and photojournalism contribute to the perpetuation of specific, negative stereotypes. They may illuminate social justice issues, but they also recreate damaging imagery in the process.

And to be in Chicago studying photojournalism at that time [in the late s], I knew full well that if I was going to pursue it as a career I was going to have to photograph my own neighborhood in a damage-centered way to tell stories about crime. Because those were the stories you covered.

INAI—The Connection

I wanted to document my community as I saw it, which was as art. And I chose not to be an active freelance photojournalist. I used my art to do a lot of community-based photography jobs, which is how I started doing photo documentation for R. A lot of people assume the majority of them are crime-involved and gang-involved.

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That is not the case. However, young males of color feel people view them that way. I want them to be able to talk about how they first came to realize that. This issue is national, so I would love for Folded Map to be a tool for anyone to explore their own geography as it relates to race, segregation, and equity.

You can fill out the contact form on my website to get updates or express your interest in getting involved. Skip to content. Search for:. Profile: Tonika Johnson, artist and activist Why do you live where you live — and why is your nonprofit located where it is? IFF: When did you first start noticing the extreme segregation in Chicago? Newsroom Contact Us Board Login.