Date
February 7, 2024

Location

Room 201, Casa Hispanica


Time
6:15 pm – 8:00 pm

Event Organizer

Justice-in-Education


Event Sponsor

Event Co-Sponsor(s)

Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities, African American and African Diaspora Studies, Department of Classics, Department of Latin American and Iberian Cultures, Department of Music, Tamer Center for Social Enterprise


Registration is required, for in-person, register here, and for virtual, register here.

Mia Ruyter and Kristina Binova in Conversation with Shedrick Blackwell and Amaury Bonilla

“As artists, educators, activists, and scholars, we ask ourselves, what is the best way to share quality arts programming with system-impacted community members? How can we participate in the struggle for prison abolition? This workshop involves art creation, reflection, and a discussion on practice. Although our work is fun and joyful and results in positive human connections, first and foremost, our priority is creating a space to deliver programming that heals, educates, and liberates. The friendship, joy, and community that sometimes happen during our programs are part of creating a liberatory space because education and healing are necessary to free them and all of us from the systems in society that lead to the dystopia of mass incarceration.”

Speakers

Kristina Bivona is an artist and scholar living in Philadelphia, PA. She has been practicing art and radical politics for over twenty years. Bivona works in Brooklyn, NY, where she co-established a printshop for prison diversion with Recess | Assembly. Her personal printmaking practice takes the form of artist pop-up books about sex work and incarceration, and she is studying for her doctorate in education at Columbia University.

Mia Ruyter is an artist and educator who coordinates educational programming at Rikers Island for the Justice-in-Education Initiative. She is studying for her doctorate in art education at Columbia University.

Shedrick Blackwell is a Returning Citizen, and a Rehabilitation-Through-the-Arts (RTA) alumnus. He received his AA in Liberal Arts through the Bard Prison Initiative (2023) and is an accomplished percussionist and actor engaged in the project of prison abolition. He is a proud father and grandfather.

Amaury Bonilla is a Re-entry Counselor at Exodus Transitional Community. A Returning Citizen and Rehabilitation-Through-the-Arts (RTA) alumnus, the Bronx-born-and-raised Bonilla came to the arts as a painter and an actor during his long years of incarceration. More recently, he has been expanding his art to include poetry, music, and storytelling. He is the very proud father to a daughter.

Moderator

Carlos Ivan Calaff is a Research Analyst and Reentry Coordinator at the Center for Justice and Justice-in-Education Program at Columbia University. In 2018 he was released from Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Ossining, New York. He is currently studying at the School for Professional Studies at Columbia University. He is a proud Puerto Rican father of two boys, a lifelong Bronx native, an unapologetic Knicks fan, and a musician.

Please email disability@columbia.edu to request disability accommodations. Advance notice is necessary to arrange for some accessibility needs.

 The Heyman Center for the Humanities, Room B-101
74 Morningside Drive
New York, NY, 10027
  (212) 854-4541
  (212) 854-3099