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CLASS:PUBLIC
DTSTAMP:20260406T040624Z
UID:10000898-1760022000-1760027400@griffinmuseum.org-1775448384@towncommon.org
DTSTART:20251009T190000Z
DTEND:20251009T203000Z
SUMMARY:Then\, Now\, Next: The Evolution of A Yellow Rose Project (In-Person
  Panel)
DESCRIPTION:Then\, Now\, Next: The Evolution of A Yellow Rose Project.An in-person
  conversation with artists from A Yellow Rose Project 
 
 The Griffin Museum is pleased to present an in-person panel discussion
  featuring artists from A Yellow Rose Project: Rania Matar\, Lisa
  McCarty\, Mary Beth Meehan\, and Toni Pepe. The conversation will be
  moderated by Yellow Rose Project Co-Founders Meg Griffiths and Frances
  Jakubek. 
 
 This panel will explore the evolution of A Yellow Rose Project --
  past\, present\, and future. The discussion will begin with the
  project's inception and the artists' initial responses to its prompt\,
  continuing through the creation and release of the work in 2020\, and
  into the present moment. Artists will reflect on how their practices
  have developed over time -- some even tracing the origins of current
  work back to A Yellow Rose Project -- and how the photographs and
  their meanings have shifted. The conversation will also consider how
  the themes of the project remain urgent and relevant today\, perhaps
  more than ever. 
 
 Grounded in the understanding that what we remember\, what we forget\,
  matters\, as historian Lisa Tetrault writes in The Myth of Seneca
  Falls\, this panel invites a critical and thoughtful reexamination of
  both history and cultural memory. In revisiting this landmark
  collaboration\, we aim to honor its historical context while also
  acknowledging the ways narratives have been shared\, revised\, or
  erased. As women and artists\, we are actively shaping the ways our
  histories are told -- and this conversation is part of that ongoing
  work. 
 
 © Rania Matar© Lisa McCarty© Mary Beth Meehan © Toni Pepe
 
 Event Details
 
 Date: One session on October 9\, 2025 
 
 Time: 3:00 - 4:30 pm EDT 
 
 Format: In-person\, at the Griffin Museum (67 Shore Rd. Winchester\,
  MA 01890) 
 
 Panel Fee: FREE for members (RSVP required) / $10 for non-members. If
  you can\, please consider donating -- your support helps the Griffin
  Museum champion photography\, uplift artists and educators\, and
  inspire a vibrant creative community.Level: Open to All! 
 
 About the Artists
 
 About Rania Matar 
 
 Photo by Helena Goessens
 
 Born and raised in Lebanon\, Matar moved to the U.S. in 1984. As a
  Lebanese-born Palestinian/American artist and mother\, her
  cross-cultural experience and personal narrative inform her
  photography. 
 
 Matar's work has been widely exhibited in museums worldwide in solo
  and group shows\, including Museum of Fine Arts\, Boston\, LACMA\,
  Carnegie Museum of Art\, ICA/Boston\, National Museum of Women in the
  Arts\, Minneapolis Institute of Art\, Fotografiska\, Institut du Monde
  Arabe\, and more. It is part of the permanent collections of several
  museums. 
 
 A mid-career retrospective of her work was on view at Cleveland Museum
  of Art\, Amon Carter Museum of American Art\, and American University
  of Beirut Museum. Additional solo museum exhibitions include
  Middlebury Museum of Art\, Huntsville Museum of Art\, Rollins Museum
  of Art\, and Eskenazi Museum at Indiana University. 
 
 Matar received several awards including a 2018 Guggenheim Fellowship\,
  2017 Mellon Foundation artist-in-residency grant\, 2021 (also 2011\,
  2007) Massachusetts Cultural Council Artist Grants\, 2011 Griffin
  Museum of Photography Legacy Award. She was a finalist for the Oskar
  Barnack Award 2023\, Arnold Newman Prize 2022\, and Outwin Portrait
  Competition 2022 with an exhibition at Smithsonian National Portrait
  Gallery/DC. 
 
 She recently curated Louder Than Hearts\, a group exhibition of women
  from the Arab World and Iran at the Middle East Institute in
  Washington\, DC. 
 
 Matar published four books: SHE\, 2021\; L'Enfant-Femme\, 2016\; A
  Girl and Her Room\, 2012\; Ordinary Lives\, 2009. She is currently
  working on her fifth book: Where Do I Go?\, to be released in Spring
  2026. 
 
 About Lisa McCarty 
 
 Lisa McCarty is a photographer\, educator\, and a
  naturalist-in-training. Equal parts forager & researcher\, her
  projects are informed by long-term fieldwork\, reading\, & archive
  digging. Many of McCarty's projects begin as a response to unsung
  ecosystems or a lack of public records. 
 
 McCarty has participated in over 100 exhibitions and screenings at
  venues including Amherst College\, Carnegie Museum of Art\,
  Cassilhaus\, the Emily Dickinson Museum\, Fruitlands Museum\, the
  Griffin Museum of Photography\, McEvoy Foundation for the Arts\, the
  Nasher Museum of Art\, and the Visual Studies Workshop. McCarty's
  photographs have also been featured in a variety of international
  festivals including Noorderlicht\, Internationale Photoszene Köln\,
  Picture Berlin\, and Sören Kierkegaard in Images\, while her moving
  images have been screened at the New York Film Festival\, Cosmic Rays
  Film Festival\, Onion City Experimental Film Festival\, Alchemy Film &
  Moving Image Festival\, Mimesis Documentary Festival\, & Small File
  Media Festival. Her books include Transcendental Concord (Radius
  Books)\, The Arboretum Aphorisms of Nathaniel Dorsky (San Francisco
  Cinematheque)\, & William Gedney's A Time of Youth (Duke University
  Press). 
 
 McCarty holds a MFA in Experimental & Documentary Arts from Duke
  University. She lives and works in Boston where she teaches at
  Northeastern University. 
 
 About Mary Beth Meehan 
 
 Mary Beth Meehan is a photographer\, writer\, and educator who uses
  images\, text\, exhibitions\, and public installations to bring people
  together in the search for common ground. Her portraiture and
  community collaborations have challenged dominant narratives across
  racial\, cultural\, and social boundaries\, addressing often fraught
  public dialogue with powerful imagery\, personal backstories and
  tender archival material that lend an essential layer of humanity\,
  insight\, and care. Originally trained as a photojournalist\, Meehan
  reckons with the limits of photography and yet continually sees the
  potential of visual art to help us uncover our social conditioning and
  unlock a path to greater understanding. 
 
 Meehan has held artist residencies at Stanford University\, Brown
  University\, the University of West Georgia\, and the University of
  Missouri School of Journalism\, and has lectured at the School of
  Visual Arts\, the Massachusetts College of Art and Design\, and the
  Missouri Photo Workshop. Meehan's work has been featured and reviewed
  in publications such as The New York Times\, The Washington Post\, The
  Boston Globe\, The Los Angeles Review of Books and Le Monde. A native
  of Brockton\, Massachusetts\, Meehan received a Bachelor of Arts
  degree in English literature at Amherst College\, and a Master of Arts
  degree in photojournalism at the University of Missouri\, Columbia.
  She lives in Providence\, Rhode Island. 
 
 About Toni Pepe 
 
 Toni Pepe creates prints and three-dimensional assemblages from
  discarded newspaper images\, family snapshots\, and obsolete
  photographic equipment\, investigating how photography shapes our
  understanding of time\, space\, and self. Her practice explores the
  layers of information a print conveys beyond its image--whether
  through the presence of text\, subtle stains\, or crop marks--each
  detail offering insight into the photograph's journey and its
  significance as a physical object. More than static images\,
  photographic prints capture and suspend our likenesses and histories\,
  bearing the marks of time and physical interaction. 
 
 Pepe is the Chair of Photography and Associate Professor of Art at
  Boston University. Her work has been exhibited nationally and
  internationally at institutions such as the Museum of Fine Arts
  (MFA)\, Boston\, Blue Sky Gallery\, and the Center for Photography at
  Woodstock. Her work is included in the permanent collections of the
  MFA Boston\, the Boston Athenaeum\, Fidelity\, the Boston Public
  Library\, the Danforth Art Museum\, the University of Oregon\, Candela
  Books + Gallery\, The Magenta Foundation\, and numerous private
  collections. She was a resident at Frans Masereel Centrum in 2023\, a
  MacDowell Fellow in 2024\, and was recently named a Howard Foundation
  and Evelyn Stefansson Nef Fellow. 
 
 About the Co-Founders
 
 About Frances Jakubek 
 
 Frances Jakubek is an image-maker\, independent curator\, and
  consultant for artists. She is the co-founder of A Yellow Rose
  Project\, past Director of the Bruce Silverstein Gallery in New York
  City\, and past Associate Curator of the Griffin Museum of Photography
  in Massachusetts. 
 
 Recent curatorial appointments include Critical Mass\, Potential
  Space: A Serious Look at Child's Play featuring works by Nancy
  Richards Farese\, Filter Photo\, The Griffin Museum of Photography\,
  British Journal of Photography\, Les Rencontres d'Arles\, Save Art
  Space\, and Photo District News. Jakubek's photographs explore the
  boundaries of private and personal space and the emotions that bind
  them. Private Publicity looks at images paired with text that
  investigate the demanding language of our social outlets. The Sensual
  Subway embraces the New York City transit system and all it has to
  offer in its intimacy and delusion. Archive of the Ego is an ongoing
  series of self-portraits that have evolved and changed over the past
  20 years. 
 
 Jakubek has been a panelist for the Massachusetts Cultural Council's
  Photography fellowships\, speaker for SPE National and Colorado
  Photographic Arts Center\, and lecturer for the School of Visual
  Arts\, Boston University\, University of New Mexico\, and Washington
  and Lee University. She has taught workshops for The Southeast Center
  for Photography\, The Center for Fine Art Photography\, Maine Media\,
  and the University of Iowa. 
 
 About Meg Griffiths 
 
 Meg Griffiths is an artist\, educator\, and the Co-Founder of A Yellow
  Rose Project. 
 
 The wide arc of her work grapples with the various modes of domestic\,
  cultural\, and political engagement that structure female experience
  in the United States. Her inquiries are driven by a desire to
  capture\, develop and share a closer understanding of
  (self-identifying) female subjects. Each project she creates\, whether
  individual or collaborative\, focused on the personal or the
  collective\, are at heart about the intrinsic connection between self
  and other\, between interiority and positionality\, as much as kinship
  and community. 
 
 Her work has traveled nationally as well as internationally\, and is
  placed in collections such as Center for Creative Photography\,
  Capital One\, and the Museum of Fine Arts Houston. Her book projects\,
  both monographs and collaborative projects\, have been acquired by
  various institutions around the country such as the Metropolitan
  Museum of Art\, Yale University Library\, Duke University Library\,
  Museum of Modern Art\, The Getty Research Institute to name a few. 
 
 She currently lives in Denton\, Texas where she is an Associate
  Professor of Photography in the Visual Arts Division at Texas Woman's
  University.
LOCATION:Griffin Museum of Photography\, 67 Shore Road\, Winchester\, MA 01890
URL:https://griffinmuseum.org/event/ayrp-panel-in-person/
CATEGORIES:Cultural\,Education
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