FARMINGTON — The Emery Community Arts Center on the UMF campus is proud to present a series of events organized by TUG Collective, an interdisciplinary arts collective, that focus on contemporary restorative justice and social issues and their community impact.
The events are part of a year-long state-wide initiative called Freedom & Captivity. They include live events and culminate in an art exhibit entitled “sea/sky, blood, earth, you.” All events are held at the Emery Community Arts Center and are free and open to the public.
Events include:
Franklin County Community Action Meeting
Tues., Nov. 2, 3 p.m.
Featuring: TUG Collective, Maine Prisoner Advocacy Coalition, Maine Prisoner Reentry Network and Maine Coastal Reentry Center
An open conversation facilitated by Bruce Noddin, Maine Prisoner Reentry Network; and Robyn Goff, Maine Coastal Reentry Center. The MPRN and MCRRC team want to hear from community members and invite Franklin County community leaders, substance use & mental health professionals, non-profits, churches, MDOC & County Jail partners, volunteers, re-entry specialists, formerly incarcerated and members of the public to join the conversation. Link for Community Action Conversation registration (registration is for purposes of seat capacity, not COVID). https://forms.gle/q65FSkh8TVgcC6P99
Exhibit: sea/sky, blood, earth, you
Mon., Nov. 1 to Thurs., Dec. 9
Opening Reception: Thurs. Nov. 4, 5 p.m.
Opening reception is followed by a 20-minute presentation by Jan Collins, assistant director of Maine Prisoner Advocacy Coalition. In addition, there will be a 15-minute workshop performance of Larraine Brown’s play “For the Next Guy,” based on the life of Norman Kehling who survived 30 years of incarceration, seven of which were spent in isolation. The evening will close with a community Q&A and conversation with Collins, Kehling, Brown and actor David Troup.
An Evening with Maine Inside Out
Mon., Nov. 8, 7:30 p.m.
Maine Inside Out is a statewide community of system impacted artists and change makers. MIO creates and shares original art to analyze social problems, to imagine and practice community-led solutions and to advocate for structural change. MIO believes art challenges oppression at the most fundamental level with bold visions for just futures.
Masks are required at all indoor events on UMF’s campus. All visitors to Emery Community Arts Center will be screened for COVID symptoms and required to register with name and contact information (either phone number or email address) upon entry. This information will only be used if the university needs to conduct contact tracing in the event of a confirmed exposure to the coronavirus.
TUG Collective, under the direction of Gaelyn Aguilar, UMF associate professor of anthropology, and Gustavo Aguilar, associate arts professor at the Tisch School of the Arts at NYU, is an interdisciplinary arts collective that creates contact zones where people can generate insights about, and produce actions around, contemporary social issues.
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October 27, 2021 at 01:00AM
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TUG Collective presents 'Freedom & Captivity' events at UMF Emery Community Arts Center - Bangor Daily News
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