As part of the podcast series, “ArtsAbly in Conversation,” Diane Kolin interviewed Tamar Bresge, an artist, writer and educator from Toronto, currently in the Creative Writing program at California Institute of the Arts.
Photo credit: Rebecca L. Welch
This post presents the resources that she mentioned during the conversation.
Tamar Bresge’s website
Tamar Bresge is an artist and writer from Toronto, Canada. She works primarily in literary art, performance, and photography, picking at positions of power, hierarchies of bodies, and locating the Self. She likes most paperback books, all kinds of sparkling water, and the Oxford comma. She is half-blind and wholly obsessed by aphorism. She received her MFA in Interdisciplinary Studio Art from Tufts University in 2022, where she additionally taught in the Experimental College. She is currently an MFA candidate in the Creative Writing program at California Institute of the Arts.
AccessNow
Founded by Disability Advocate Maayan Ziv, AccessNow’s mission is to establish a go-to resource for accessibility information. They are building a connected platform to empower people to discover a world of accessible opportunities, make better decisions and remove barriers. They are learning how accessible the world is and mapping as many places as they possibly can and they invite you to join them. A worldwide community, passionate about change, they engage with everybody to empower each other to have access now. Every review added to their platform is one more instance of advocacy, one more experience that highlights the accessibility of a place.
AccessNow’s NextGen Program
NextGen is a 6-week personal leadership program to empower disabled youth. Through transformative learning, the program fosters employability and innovation by nurturing disability advocacy and inclusion. The AccessStudio: NextGen program transcends traditional employability training, focusing instead on cultivating visionary leaders with disabilities.Inspired by the spirit of self-starters and entrepreneurs, participants of NextGen move through a series of educational modules and community mentorship, while simultaneously building out real-world capstone projects. The goal is to not only develop skills for future entrepreneurial pursuits or employment, but also build confidence and experiences as future disability leaders.
More information about the program
Danielle Abrams
Danielle Abrams performed for over 20 years as personae that emerge from her interracial family, and from a lexicon of figures in art history and popular culture. Some of her performances included Quadroon, in which she embodied her black Southern grandmother, and New York Jewish bubbie. In Routine, Abrams cleansed Catskills entertainment of its racist legacy through performing a comedy routine while bathing in a tub of borscht. In After Before the Revolution, she cast herself in Eleanor Antin’s role as a black (and Jewish) ballerina, and reshuffled the tenets of western Modernism as a member of the Ballet Russes accompanied by the Black Panther party. In her latest performance, Nominee, Abrams envisions being interviewed by a panel of African-American artist-politicos, Jewish grandparents, and iconic representations of multiculturalism, including Adrian Piper, the Black Panthers, anonymous notables in the black contemporary art scene, and President Barack Obama.