Sunday 21 April 2013, 2–5pm
at East Room, Tate Modern
Free, no booking required
Bringing together artists, activists, and the collective, Justice for Domestic Workers, this event will explore the relationship between domestic labour and artists' practice, specifically in relation to visibility and value. Presentations and discussion will look at how strategies of art production and distribution can inform and support social movements related to labour and visibility.
Contributors are: Justice for Domestic Workers, Andrea Francke, and Werker Magazine (Marc Roig Blesa and Rogier Delfos)
Following the discussion there will be a screening of Nightcleaners by Berwick Street Collective the Starr Auditorium at Tate Modern.
This event is in collaboration with Tate Modern.
Established in 2009 and supported by Unite the Union, J4DW is an organisation of migrant domestic workers who work in private houses in the UK, and active in campaigning for rights for domestic workers.
MoreBorn in Peru and now based in London, Francke is an artist currently developing two main research projects: Invisible spaces of parenthood and The Piracy Project. She was a recipient of the Red Mansion Art Prize in 2011.
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