As an undergraduate student at Virginia Commonwealth University in 2012, Mark Strandquist began the “” project that continues today. He asks incarcerated men, women, and teens to respond to the following question: “If you could have a window in your cell, what place from your past would it look out to?”
The writing becomes a photo assignment for voluntary photographers around the country, and the result becomes publicly exhibited art that brings together people in diverse communities, humanizes the people who populate U.S. prisons, and raises questions about the U.S. penal system.
Strandquist, who graduated from VCU with a bachelor’s of fine arts in photography and film and a minor in sociology, has garnered both media attention and significant grants to continue his work. He has also started “,” and the , during which participants in the Philadelphia area work with lawyers and legal aid advocates to use their criminal records to create artwork that is then stitched into a giant quilt.
He’ll share more about both the “Windows from Prison” project and a newer project with a youth focus called “” during a two-day visit to Harrisonburg, during which he’ll present the annual Albert N. Keim Lecture at 91Ƶ.
Feb. 22: Exhibit opening and panel discussion at James Madison University
Strandquist will attend an opening reception for an exhibition of artwork from “Windows from Prison” and “Performing Statistics” from 5-7 p.m. at the New Image Gallery, 131 W. Grace St. in Harrisonburg. It runs Feb. 22 – April 8t. [For gallery hours, click .]
From 7-8:30 p.m. at Duke Hall Gallery Court, Strandquist participates in a panel discussion titled “Youth, Art and Justice: ethics, engagement and action” with Howard Zehr, co-director of the Zehr Institute for Restorative Justice and an artist and photographer who was worked in and among prisoners; Jeree Thomas, an attorney with Legal Aid Justice Center in Richmond, Virginia; and youth members from the Harrisonburg-Rockingham Youth Council, Office on Children and Youth, Institute for Innovation in Health and Human Services at JMU.
Parking is available on Grace St in Lots C5 and R14 adjacent to 131 West Grace Street (where New Image Gallery is housed) and Lot C6 across the street. No parking permits will be necessary.
Feb. 22: Exhibit opening at 91Ƶ
A concurrent exhibition, featuring art from the “Performing Statistics” project, will be at 91Ƶ’s Hartzler Gallery located on the main floor of 91Ƶ’s Sadie Hartzler Library from Feb. 22 – March 24. [For gallery hours, click .]
Feb. 23: Albert N. Keim Lecture at 91Ƶ
Strandquist presents the Albert N. Keim Lecture at 7 p.m. in Martin Chapel at Eastern Mennonite Seminary. His topic is “Performing Statistics: Connecting incarcerated youth, artists, and leading policy experts to challenge Virginia’s juvenile justice system.”
is a project which connects incarcerated teens with a group of artists, designers, educators and Virginia’s leading policy advocates to transform the juvenile justice system. The summer art and advocacy initiative began last summer, when three days a week, a group of incarcerated youth from the Richmond Juvenile Detention Center came to Atlas, ART 180’s teen art center. There they worked with local artists to produce a series of media campaigns and mobile exhibitions.
More events
Additional exhibitions will take place in Duke Hall critique space and at Laughing Dog Gallery, 82 S. Main St., Harrisonburg, which will host a reception from 5-8 p.m. on March 4, during the First Friday Downtown event. The exhibit will be open from March 4-25. Check for updates.
Project sponsors
Strandquist’s visit is supported by the Madison Collaborative: Ethical Reasoning in Action; The School of Art, Design and Art History; the sociology and anthropology departments; New Image Gallery; and The Institute for Innovation in Health and Human Service, all at JMU. It is in partnership with the and v departments at 91Ƶ, and Tom Brenneman and . It is co-hosted by OFAR, an artist residency in Harrisonburg focusing on social justice.
