EventsThe New Social Environment#716
Heather Hart: She Cuts Through Worlds
Featuring Hart and Zoë Hopkins, with Woogee Bae
Tuesday, December 20, 2022 1 p.m. Eastern / 10 a.m. Pacific
These free events are produced by The Brooklyn Rail.
Artist Heather Hart joins Rail contributor Zoë Hopkins for a conversation. We conclude with a poetry reading by Woogee Bae.
In this Talk
Heather Hart

Through her interdisciplinary practice Heather Hart fuses fabricated and historical belief systems; legends that have been bequeathed through generations mixed with invention and intuition. She is captivated by the slippage, the liminal space, between truth and fiction, oral and written histories; between what one says and what the other hears. Hart is interested in the communication between the public and the artist, the public and the work, and public with each other in a space. She is interested in cognition as it intersects with the built environment, historical records and the Black fantastic. Hart co-founded the nonprofit Black Lunch Table, most recently was a Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard, and is an Assistant Professor at Rutgers University.
Zoë Hopkins

Zoë Hopkins is a writer and critic based in New York. She received her BA in Art History and African American Studies at Harvard University, and is currently working on her MA in Modern and Contemporary Art at Columbia University. Her writing has been published in the Brooklyn Rail, Artforum, Cultured and Hyperallergic.
The Rail has a tradition of ending our conversations with a poetry reading, and we're fortunate to have Dao Strom reading.
Dao Strom

Artist Dao Strom works with three “voices”—written, sung, visual—to explore hybridity and the intersection of personal and collective histories. She is the author of Instrument (Fonograf Editions, 2020) and its musical companion Traveler’s Ode (Antiquated Future Records, 2020); a bilingual poetry-art book, You Will Always Be Someone From Somewhere Else (AJAR Press); a memoir, We Were Meant To Be a Gentle People, and song cycle, East/West; and two books of fiction, The Gentle Order of Girls and Boys and Grass Roof, Tin Roof. Born in Vietnam, Strom grew up in the Sierra Nevada foothills of California and lives in Portland, Oregon. She is co-founder of two collective art projects, She Who Has No Master(s), and De-Canon.
We’d like to thank The Marion Boulton Kippy Stroud Foundation and Teiger Foundation for making these conversations possible, and for their support of our growing archive 🌈✨