BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:icalendar-ruby
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
X-WR-CALNAME:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of
  Martha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
X-WR-TIMEZONE:Eastern Time (US & Canada)
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271027122
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260409
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271027123
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260410
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271028148
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260411
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271029173
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260412
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271030198
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260416
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271031223
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260417
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271032248
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260418
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271034297
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260419
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271035322
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260423
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271036347
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260424
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271037372
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260425
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271039421
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260426
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271040446
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260430
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271043519
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260501
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271044544
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260502
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271045569
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260503
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271047618
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260507
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271050691
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260508
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271053764
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260509
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271054789
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260510
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271055814
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260514
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271057863
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260515
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271058888
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260516
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271060937
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260517
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021446Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271061962
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260521
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271064011
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260522
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271064012
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260523
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271065037
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260524
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271066062
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260528
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271067087
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260529
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271068112
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260530
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271069137
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260531
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271069138
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260604
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271070163
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260605
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271071188
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260606
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271072213
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260607
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271073238
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260611
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271073239
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260612
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271074264
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260613
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271075289
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260614
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271076314
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260618
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271077339
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260619
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271078364
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260620
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271078365
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260621
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271079390
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260625
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271080415
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260626
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271081440
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260627
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260613T021447Z
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_52552271082465
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260628
DESCRIPTION:A visceral comparison of two influential works of video art: Bl
 utclip (1993) by Swiss visual artist Pipilotti Rist and Vital Statistics o
 f a Citizen\, Simply Obtained (1977) by American conceptual artist Martha 
 Rosler.\n\nThis exhibition invites you to compare these two works\; to exp
 lore how each show the female body as transmogrified by society into a thi
 ng both abject and alien. Of equal importance\, we invite you to interroga
 te the different ways human beings are systematically controlled and dehum
 anized—not only women\, but also ‘foreigners’ and ‘citizens’. Th
 ese works dare to ask how a person can feel both alien and native at the s
 ame time\, bound or unbound\, home or not-at-home. They challenge the soci
 etal forces that create this rending state of being.\n\nThematic questions
  we encourage you to consider while viewing these works include: Why do we
  otherize people? How can an objectified person reclaim feeling human? How
  can I be whole again?\n\nThis exhibition is sponsored by Laura Ricciardel
 li and David Watt.
GEO:38.981477;-76.491918
LOCATION:Mitchell Art Museum
SUMMARY:In the Videodrome — Abjection and Alienation: Video Works of Mart
 ha Rosler and Pipilotti Rist
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.sjc.edu/event/in-the-videodrome-abjection-and-
 alienation-video-works-of-martha-rosler-and-pipilotti-rist
CATEGORIES:Exhibitions
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
