Metaphor and Illness: Mariam Ghani and Guests

With daily news about the spread of viruses, a measles outbreak, and superbugs, how does an artist respond?

FEATURING
– Mariam Ghani, artist-in-residence, filmmaker
– Jayne Raper, professor of biological sciences, Hunter College
– Rodrick Wallace, epidemiology research scientist, New York State Psychiatric Institute
– Deborah Wallace, author and ecology researcher

Contagious Cities, an international cultural project taking place in Berlin, Geneva, Hong Kong, and New York commemorates the centenary of the 1918 flu pandemic through cultural programs and exhibitions in an effort to raise awareness about epidemic preparedness. As part of this conversation, Afghani multi-media artist Mariam Ghani’s film “Dis-Ease” investigates how the linguistic and visual metaphors we use to understand illness have evolved over time, and whether changes in how we speak about diseases affect how we treat them.

Ghani, whose film was part of a recent exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York, and whose work has been shown at the Guggenheim, MoMA, the National Gallery, and elsewhere is the artist-in-residence at The New York Public Library and the Graduate Center, The City University of New York. She is also the daughter of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani. Following a short screening of her film, Ghani will be joined by guests whose work touches on issues the film raises about science, the history and philosophy of medicine, and biopolitics. The screening and discussion are held in conjunction with the Library’s exhibition, Mapping Contagion: Representing Infectious Disease in New York City.

Those interested in discussing research methods with an emphasis on cartography are invited to join the Mapping Contagion symposium which will be held prior to the panel discussion on April 3. More information and a link to free registration for the symposium can be found here.

Supported by Wellcome, as part of Contagious Cities.











When: Wed., Apr. 3, 2019 at 6:30 pm
Where: New York Public Library—Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
476 Fifth Ave.
917-275-6975
Price: Free
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With daily news about the spread of viruses, a measles outbreak, and superbugs, how does an artist respond?

FEATURING
– Mariam Ghani, artist-in-residence, filmmaker
– Jayne Raper, professor of biological sciences, Hunter College
– Rodrick Wallace, epidemiology research scientist, New York State Psychiatric Institute
– Deborah Wallace, author and ecology researcher

Contagious Cities, an international cultural project taking place in Berlin, Geneva, Hong Kong, and New York commemorates the centenary of the 1918 flu pandemic through cultural programs and exhibitions in an effort to raise awareness about epidemic preparedness. As part of this conversation, Afghani multi-media artist Mariam Ghani’s film “Dis-Ease” investigates how the linguistic and visual metaphors we use to understand illness have evolved over time, and whether changes in how we speak about diseases affect how we treat them.

Ghani, whose film was part of a recent exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York, and whose work has been shown at the Guggenheim, MoMA, the National Gallery, and elsewhere is the artist-in-residence at The New York Public Library and the Graduate Center, The City University of New York. She is also the daughter of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani. Following a short screening of her film, Ghani will be joined by guests whose work touches on issues the film raises about science, the history and philosophy of medicine, and biopolitics. The screening and discussion are held in conjunction with the Library’s exhibition, Mapping Contagion: Representing Infectious Disease in New York City.

Those interested in discussing research methods with an emphasis on cartography are invited to join the Mapping Contagion symposium which will be held prior to the panel discussion on April 3. More information and a link to free registration for the symposium can be found here.

Supported by Wellcome, as part of Contagious Cities.

Buy tickets/get more info now