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Diasporic Futurism - Pt. II
Curated by: 
Leah King & Juan Carlos Rodríguez Rivera
2nd Sat Reception: 
Saturday, February 13, 2021 - 6:00pm to 8:00pm
Exhibition Dates: 
Feb 1, 2021 to Feb 27, 2021
Gallery Hours (or by appointment): 
by appointment & online

Dena Al-Adeeb**

Pansee Atta

Madame Bessie Snow**

Sofia Cordova**

Nimisha Doongarwal

Eseosa Edebiri

Carla Golder

Haldane Charles King

dani lopez*

Alicia McDaniel*

Afatasi the Artist

Richard-Jonathan Nelson

Ze Royale**

Mohsin Shafi**

Mimi Tempestt

Tanna Tucker**

Amy Vázquez
Allison Yasukawa

*Current Root Division Studio Artist

** Diasporic Futurism Part 2 Artist

Diasporic Futurism was born out of the desire to showcase and celebrate emerging and established Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) artists whose work reckons with the themes of imagination, identity, place, and joy. Diasporas honor the history of forced migration as a result of political, cultural, and physical subjugation that is the story of many BIPOC peoples currently living in occupied Northern American land. Futurism envisions imaginative, alternate realities full of beauty, possibility, and liberation, systematically denied to those populations because of a patriarchal, capitalist, white supremacist society. 

This show is evolving, and asks for your participation. Due to COVID-19, the exhibit has been restructured into a two-part series that launched in July, 2020, with a virtual exhibit, and continues into February, 2021, with Diasporic Futurism Part 2 - The Future Futures. This iteration of the exhibition will feature a series of video-based and live activations throughout the Bay Area, while also featuring an immersive and multidimensional experience in the gallery with video installations, 3-D art work, surrealist painting, sculpture, comic and graphic drawings.

Diasporic Futurism is firmly rooted in the desire to find joy in dynamic chaos of systemic upheaval, while unapologetically centering the voices, lives, and stories of Black people. 

Image Above: Fight or Flight?, Tanner Tucker, digital and ink, 10 x 10 in, 2020

About the Curators:
Leah King is a multiracial Oakland native with an extensive costume collection and abhorrence for subtlety who has been in the 99.9th percentile for height and weight since the day she was born. A producer, DJ, and vocalist, King is a member of international electronic arts network female:pressure and CTRL+SHFT Collective in Oakland. She is the host of Culture of Consent with King, “C.O.C.K. Podcast,” Center for Cultural Innovation 2019 grantee, and 2018-2019 Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Political Power Fellow. King tours internationally and has collaborated with artists Mykki Blanco, Shantell Martin, and Ebony Bones, and has shared stages with Margaret Cho, Marc Jacobs, Eve Ensler, and Big Freedia. King has taught arts education courses with over 20 organizations, including Brazil’s Rosas Urbanas Breakdancing Crew, InterACT English in Berlin, Center for Anti-Violence Education and the New York City Department of Education, and she is currently the Director of Education at Women’s Audio Mission.

Juan Carlos Rodríguez Rivera is a queer boricua visual communicator and educator, passionate about food, lover of ephemeral objects, gradients and anything with glitter. Juan’s work focuses on challenging colonial perspectives in design from the point of view of a boricua diaspora. In 2019, in collaboration with musician/artist Leah King, they created GLTTR Collective a group working with artists of color creating Diasporic Futurisms. Juan Carlos is an organizer of the Decolonial School at California College of the Arts and a participant of Arts Accelerator at Intersection for the Arts. Juan Carlos holds an MFA in Communications Design from Pratt Institute in NY. Throughout his career, Juan Carlos has participated in many exhibitions, conferences and fellowships; including the Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, and the Dialogo Global: Decolonizing Knowledge and Power School in Barcelona.

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Address: 1131 Mission Street, San Francisco, CA  94103. Please buzz for entry.

Office Hours: Monday - Friday, 11am to 6pm / Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Saturday, 2pm to 6pm

415.863.7668 / info@rootdivision.org

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