Event - Other-Worlding Touch Tour for Blind and low vision participants with Emilie L. Gossiaux

Other-Worlding Touch Tour for Blind and low vision participants with Emilie L. Gossiaux

01.21.24, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

A drawing of three Labrador dogs with leashes in their mouths that connect to a white cane maypole, dancing around flowers and under a sun and moon.

Emilie Gossiaux, "Dancing, Again", 2023, Ballpoint pen and crayon on paper, 23” x 35”, Courtesy the artist.

Visitors who are blind or have low vision are invited to join Emilie L. Gossiaux on a touch tour of her exhibition, Other-Worlding. Core to this program is the idea of touch and access as love. Participants will learn about the proper way to touch art with consent and care. They will experience Gossiaux’s sculptural installation White Cane Maypole Dance through touch and verbal description, as well as the artist’s explanation of her process. 

 

Space is limited to 20 participants and registration is required. Please RSVP here.

For questions or assistance registering for the program, please email accessibility@queensmuseum.org or call 718 592 9700.

 

Upcoming Touch Tour Date:

Apr 7, 2-3pm: Other-Worlding Touch Tour with Emilie L. Gossiaux

 

About the Artist:

Emilie L. Gossiaux (b. 1989 New Orleans, LA) lives and works in New York City. Gossiaux earned a BFA from the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in 2014, and an MFA from Yale School of Art in 2019. Her solo shows include Memory of a Body (2020) and Significant Otherness (2022) at Mother Gallery, among others. Select group exhibitions include Crip Time, Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt (2021); Greater New York, MoMA PS1 (2021); and 52 Artists, A Feminist Milestone, The Aldrich Contemporary (2022); among others. Gossiaux was awarded a John F. Kennedy Center’s VSA Prize (2013), the Wynn Newhouse Award (2019), a NYFA Barbara and Carl Zydney Grant (2021), the Colene Brown Art Prize (2022), and The Pébéo Production Prize (2023). Her work has been featured in publications such as The Brooklyn Rail, The New Yorker, Art in America, and Topical Cream Magazine.

Emilie L. Gossiaux: Other-Worlding is made possible in part by lead support from the Jerome Foundation, Ford Foundation, Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Untitled Art x Pébéo Production Prize, and Queens Museum Exhibitions Circle.