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A Conversation with Luke DuBois and Sara Hendren
You’re Not Gonna Solve These Problems in Your Basement Alone
A Conversation About Accessible Design and Activism
The CFA asked Luke DuBois to invite his friends to Wesleyan this semester to have public conversations about issues relating to the fall exhibition in Zilkha Gallery, “In Real Time.” The first of these conversations was a talk last Thursday between DuBois and Sara Hendren, an artist, designer and engineer whose work centers on disability and accessibility.
Hendren gave a short talk titled, “Investigating Normal: Adaptive Assistive Technology” about her work as a professor at Olin College, a design and engineering school, and as an advocate for disability rights and expanded accessibility resources.
Hendren deconstructs cultural attitudes about disabilities that are often proliferated through media depictions of disabled individuals. Rather than assuming that a disabled person is abnormal and needs to be fixed, Hendren looks for ways to honor and accommodate variation instead of curing disability. Her projects and pedagogy expand dialogue between individuals with disabilities and designers, and seeks to make the world a friendlier place for different types of bodies.
She presented some of her amazing projects, which include:
- Creating transportable ramps that work for both skateboarders and wheelchair users.
- Redesigning the International Symbol of Access to be more representative of people that need and use accessible spaces.
- Facilitating a dialogue with a man who only had one hand, and designing a prosthetic to help him rock climb, rather than designing a multi-use prosthetic hand that he did not feel that he needed.
The humanities are an integral part of Hendren’s work solving human problems, in addition to the work of researching, designing, and engineering that is typically assigned to the sciences. Her philosophy of human-centered design emphasizes discussion between designers and users, and cultural competency about disability and accessibility. In working to merge STEM fields and the humanities, Hendren sees her work as falling along the continuum pictured below:
Afterwards, Luke DuBois encouraged a dynamic and interesting conversation between the audience and the two speakers. Bringing Hendren’s lecture closer to our daily physical context, a Wesleyan professor pointed our how inaccessible Wesleyan is, and the urgency of providing accessible resources in addition to having these conversations on campus.
You can find more information about Sara Hendren’s projects here.
To read more about ableism at Wes look here.
You can watch the whole conversation here.
Welcome to the Luke DuBois Blog!
Zilkha Gallery’s fall exhibition, “In Real Time,” features work by contemporary artist, musician, activist and teacher, Luke DuBois. This semester, DuBois will be participating in conversations with guests at the CFA, performing in concerts, and visiting classes, and sometimes just hanging out. This blog is the place for all things DuBois this semester, like lists of events you should go to:
- Curator Talk and Gallery Walkthrough with Lauren Rosati, Saturday, November 7 at 2pm in Zilkha Gallery
- Conversation with Reid Farrington, Thursday, November 12 at 5pm in the CFA Hall
- Hard Data Redux, Friday, November 20 at 8pm in Zilkha Gallery
- Todd Reynolds: Still Life with Microphone, Thursday, December 3 at 8pm in CFA Hall
…And cool bits of extra information like this catalogue for the exhibition, which has a short description of the exhibition written by curator, Lauren Rosati, as well as images of all of the works in the exhibition (some of which are not on view). You can find your home state and you won’t even need binoculars to see all the words people in your hometown are using to describe themselves in their online dating profiles! The link is here.