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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251115T143000
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CREATED:20251003T212138Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251110T165513Z
UID:10000872-1763217000-1763224200@uwm.edu
SUMMARY:Story Cart with Madeleine Doelker Berlin - The Listening / Soundbath of the Ordinary
DESCRIPTION:Saturday\, November 15\, 2:30-4:30pm (retreat runs 12:30-4:30pm)\n\n\n\nHaggerty Museum of Art\, 1234 W Tory Hill St\n\n\n\nPart of the Community Art & Wellness Retreat; registration requested\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThe Listening / Soundbath of the Ordinary\n\n\n\nAt the Haggerty Museum of Art’s Community Art & Wellness Retreat\, we’ll attend to silence\, noise\, and everything in-between.  \n\n\n\nThen\, we’ll talk about it\, recording our conversations for the Story Cart’s digital archive.  \n\n\n\nAbout the Community Art & Wellness Retreat\n\n\n\nThe Haggerty Museum of Art invites you to become inspired\, rejuvenated and reminded of the powerful role art plays in our collective well-being.  \n\n\n\nRunning from 12:30 to 4:30pm\, this day of overlapping programming includes a talk by installation artist Jan Tichy\, a reflective artmaking activity led by art therapists Emily Drenovsky (Marquette University Wellness Center) and Jodi Brown (Mount Mary Graduate Student)\, contemplative dialogue with spiritual guide Heather Schmidt\, printmaking with art therapist Erica Browne\, weaving with artist Bryana Bibbs\, a performance by Catey Ott Dance Collective\, a sound bath by Melissa Blue Muhammad\, and attention activism with C21’s Story Cart. \n\n\n\nThe retreat celebrates the Haggerty’s No One Knows All It Takes\, an exhibition of work by four artists (Bryana Bibbs\, Raoul Deal\, Maria Gaspar\, and Swoon) who explore the effects of concealed trauma and the inextricable ties between personal health and collective wellness. By addressing issues like addiction\, incarceration\, immigration\, and a lack of systemic support for caregivers\, the artists emphasize the power of personal stories to illuminate problems that are often overlooked or purposefully hidden from view. Moving beyond self-care and individualized treatments\, the work directs us to some of the root causes of trauma and highlights systemic issues that undermine societal well-being. \n\n\n\nThis event is free and open to the public. Prior registration for the Community Art & Wellness Retreat is requested by the Haggerty Museum of Art. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nAbout Madeleine Doelker Berlin\n\n\n\nMadeleine Doelker Berlin (LPC-IT) is an Associate Licensed Professional Counselor\, Social Scientist\, and a few other things—like an immigrant\, a parent\, and someone who’s lived through big transitions. Born\, raised\, and partially professionally trained in Germany\, she has a background in social inequality research and a professional path that weaves through mental health\, public service\, and community advocacy. In both her life and work\, Madeleine brings an intersectional\, systems-aware lens to understanding how people move through the world. Her current work draws on liberation psychology\, existentialist psychology\, and feminist psychology to explore how personal healing is connected to social context\, meaning-making\, and resistance. She’s especially interested in the stories we carry\, the cultures that shape us\, and the quiet\, radical act of paying attention. Madeleine holds graduate degrees in Social Sciences and Clinical Mental Health Counseling. Her approach is grounded\, curious\, and deeply human. \n\n\n\nAbout Story Cart\n\n\n\nStory Cart is a mobile story collection program that travels to community spaces and engages Milwaukeeans in conversations about their lived experiences. Our Story Fellows craft questions related to the current C21 research theme\, record participant responses to those questions\, and add them to our Story Cart digital archive (forthcoming). Supported by the Wisconsin Institute for Citizenship and Civil Dialogue\, Story Cart’s current run introduces Milwaukeeans to practices of radical attention. From September 2025 through May 2026\, our community Story Fellows will lead workshop pop-ups throughout the city and will record discussions with participants about the experience of paying attention.
URL:https://uwm.edu/c21/event/sc-mdb-the-listening/
LOCATION:Marquette Haggerty Museum of Art\, 530 N 13th St\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53233\, United States
CATEGORIES:Alumni & Community,Arts and Culture,Attention,Health and Well-being,Off-campus,Public,SLOW,Slow Care,Story Cart,Student Life,Workshops
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ORGANIZER;CN="Center for 21st Century Studies":MAILTO:c21@uwm.edu
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20251009T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20251009T180000
DTSTAMP:20260607T141234
CREATED:20250911T163502Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250914T230656Z
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SUMMARY:Human Club: Disappearance Jail Wisconsin discussion and workshop
DESCRIPTION:Take a trip with Human Club to the Haggerty Museum of Art for a discussion and workshop about art and the impact of incarceration with artist Maria Gaspar along with Dr. Robert S. Smith\, Director of the Center for Urban Research Teaching & Outreach (CURTO)\, and members of the CURTO Education Preparedness Program staff.  \n\n\n\nFree and open to the public. Space is limited. Prior registration required (below). \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n“Disappearance Jail Wisconsin” discussion and workshop is part of the Haggerty Museum of Art‘s No One Knows All It Takes\, an exhibition of work by four artists (Bryana Bibbs\, Raoul Deal\, Maria Gaspar\, and Swoon [Caledonia Curry]) who explore the effects of concealed trauma and the inextricable ties between personal health and collective wellness. By addressing issues like addiction\, incarceration\, immigration\, and a lack of systemic support for caregivers\, the artists emphasize the power of personal stories to illuminate problems that are often overlooked or purposefully hidden from view. Moving beyond self-care and individualized treatments\, the work directs us to some of the root causes of trauma and highlights systemic issues that undermine societal well-being. \n\n\n\nMaria Gaspar is a Chicago-born\, first-generation\, interdisciplinary artist negotiating the politics of location through installation\, sculpture\, sound\, and performance. Gaspar’s body of work addresses issues of spatial justice in order to amplify\, mobilize\, or divert structures of power through individual and collective gestures. For the past decade\, Gaspar has been recognized nationally for her multi-year projects that attempt to dismantle borders\, transcend penal matter\, and turn places of precarity into places of possibility. Formative works like “Radioactive: Stories from Beyond the Wall” and the “96 Acres Project” include site interventions at the largest single-site jail in the country\, the Cook County Department of Corrections\, in her childhood neighborhood. \n\n\n\nDr. Robert S. Smith is the Director of the Center for Urban Research\, Teaching & Outreach (CURTO) and Harry G. John Professor of History at Marquette University. His research and teaching interests include African American history\, civil rights history\, and exploring the intersections of race and law. Rob is the author of Black Liberation from Reconstruction to Black Lives Matter in the Debating American History Series\, and Race\, Labor & Civil Rights: Griggs v. Duke Power and the Struggle for Equal Employment Opportunity. Rob also serves on the Board of Curators for the Wisconsin Historical Society\, is the Resident Historian for America’s Black Holocaust Museum\, and is Chair of the Milwaukee County Human Rights Commission. \n\n\n\nHuman Club\, C21’s newest initiative\, features free field trips around Milwaukee and humanities gatherings with your fellow humans. Comes with a membership punch-card! 
URL:https://uwm.edu/c21/event/hc-disappearance-jail-wisconsin/
LOCATION:Marquette Haggerty Museum of Art\, 530 N 13th St\, Milwaukee\, WI\, 53233\, United States
CATEGORIES:Alumni & Community,Arts and Culture,Co-Promotional,Faculty and Staff,Human Club,Off-campus,Student Life
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