Skip to content
Harmony Hammond

A Queer Reader, 2010

Harmony Hammond included in Otherwise Obscured: Erasure in Body and Text, curated by Danilo Machado, at Franklin Street Works, Stamford, CT.

The gallery's press release follows: 

On view from September 21, 2019 – January 26, 2020, Franklin Street Works fall group exhibition Otherwise Obscured: Erasure in Body and Text, is curated by Danilo Machado and explores how tactics of erasure can be used to uphold systems of oppression and colonization, but can also be counterpoints—artists can turn a subtractive act into an additive one, poke holes in the colonizer’s language and logic, and queer temporal spaces and histories. Otherwise Obscured examines relationships between the erasure of text through redaction and illegibility and the erasure of bodies through policy and violence. The exhibition’s title riffs on poet Ángel García’s definition of erasure in the 2019 essay Lessons on Erasure

The intergenerational group of artists presented engage with a range of source materials—including government legislation, museum catalogs, and archival photography—to create work in video, audio, performance, poetry, and other media. The works in the show blur distinctions between obscuring and revealing, showing how acts of erasure can subvert notions of authority. 

Otherwise Obscured: Erasure in Body and Text
September 21, 2019 – January 26, 2020
Franklin Street Works
Stamford, CT