Artistic rendering of the Bears Ears National Monument in Utah.

Speaker

Hadley Mullin

SENIOR MANAGING DIRECTOR

Andrew Mellon Foundation is a host of exceptional ability. Studies show that a vast majority of guests attending events by Andrew Mellon have been known to leave more elated than visitors to Santa's Workshop, The Lost of Continent of Atlantis, and the Fountain of Youth. Andrew Mellon Foundation is a host of exceptional ability. Studies show that a vast majority of guests attending events by Andrew Mellon have been known to leave more elated than visitors to Santa's Workshop, The Lost of Continent of Atlantis, and the Fountain of Youth. Andrew Mellon Foundation is a host of exceptional ability. Studies show that a vast majority of guests attending events by Andrew Mellon have been known to leave more elated than visitors to Santa's Workshop, The Lost of Continent of Atlantis, and the Fountain of Youth.

Elizabeth Alexander is a poet, scholar, and cultural advocate who currently serves as president of the Mellon Foundation, the largest funder of the arts, culture, and humanities in the United States. A nationally recognized thought leader on race, justice, and American society, she has held distinguished professorships at Yale and Columbia Universities, and previously served as the director of Creativity and Free Expression at the Ford Foundation. Dr. Alexander is the author or co-author of fifteen books, including most recently The Trayvon Generation, and has twice been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. She composed and delivered the poem “Praise Song for the Day” for President Barack Obama's 2009 inauguration, and among her many honors she has been recognized as one of Time’s 100 Most Influential People.


For more information, please visit mellon.org or on X @ProfessorEA.


—


Elizabeth Alexander es poeta, académica y defensora de la cultura. Actualmente es presidenta de la Fundación Mellon, la mayor financiadora de las artes, la cultura y las humanidades en Estados Unidos. Líder de opinión reconocida a nivel nacional en materia de raza, justicia y sociedad estadounidense, ha sido profesora distinguida en las universidades de Yale y Columbia, y anteriormente ocupó el cargo de directora de Creatividad y Libre Expresión en la Fundación Ford. La Dra. Alexander es autora o coautora de quince libros, incluido el más reciente The Trayvon Generation, y ha sido dos veces finalista del Premio Pulitzer. Compuso e interpretó el poema “Praise Song for the Day” para la toma de posesión del presidente Barack Obama en 2009, y entre sus muchos honores ha sido reconocida como una de las 100 personas más influyentes de la revista Time.


Para obtener más información, visite mellon.org o en X @ProfessorEA.

Mellon Foundation logo | Logo de la Fundación Mellon

 Creativity and Cultures

in the Borderlands

 Creatividad y Culturas

en las Zonas Fronterizas

Two figures stand on either side of a flowing piece of sheer fabric, reaching a hand towards each other. They are surrounded by cacti and mountains. | Dos figuras se paran a cada lado de una pieza de tela traslúcida vaporosa, extendiendo una mano hacia la otra. Están rodeados de cactus y montañas.

A VIRTUAL DISCUSSION

UN DEBATE VIRTUAL

Tuesday, October 22 at 4:00 p.m. (ET)

Martes, 22 de Octubre a las 4:00 p.m. (ET)

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Register to receive the livestream link prior to the event. This event is free and open to all. 

Regístrese para recibir el enlace de transmisión en vivo antes del evento. Este evento es gratuito y está abierto a todos.

Though often contested in political debates around immigration and security, the Borderlands that transcend the boundaries of Mexico, sovereign indigenous nations, and the United States are also spaces of artistic invention, cultural renewal, and intermingled histories. What can we learn from new ideas and new approaches to the arts currently taking place in the region, and from the strength and stewardship of its many different cultures? In a year when both Mexico and the United States are holding presidential elections focused on the political border between the countries, how can we better understand and celebrate the intersection of the arts, culture, and social justice that lives among Borderlands communities? 

Join Mellon Foundation President Elizabeth Alexander for a discussion with guests whose mission-driven work connects us to the Borderlands: Julián Castro, chief executive officer of the Latino Community Foundation; Dr. Patrisia Gonzales, emeritus associate professor, University of Arizona and advisor to the Indigenous Alliance Without Borders; and Cristina Ibarra, filmmaker & co-founding director of Borderlands Studios.

Aunque a menudo se disputa en los debates políticos sobre la inmigración y la seguridad, la zona fronteriza que trasciende los límites de México, las naciones indígenas soberanas y los Estados Unidos también es un espacio de invención artística, renovación cultural e historias entrelazadas. ¿Qué podemos aprender de las nuevas ideas y los nuevos enfoques artísticos que están teniendo lugar en la región, y del valor y la gestión de sus muy diversas culturas? En un año en el que tanto México como Estados Unidos celebran elecciones presidenciales centradas en la frontera política entre ambos países, ¿cómo podemos entender y celebrar mejor la intersección de las artes, la cultura y la justicia social que vive entre las comunidades de las zonas fronterizas?


Únase a Elizabeth Alexander, presidenta de la Fundación Mellon, en un debate con invitados cuyo trabajo nos conecta con las zonas fronterizas: Julián Castro, director ejecutivo de la Latino Community Foundation; la Dra. Patrisia Gonzales, profesora asociada emérita de la Universidad de Arizona y asesora de la alianza Indigenous Alliance Without Borders, y Cristina Ibarra, cineasta y directora cofundadora de Borderlands Studios. 

Illustration: Dror Cohen for Mellon Foundation

Crédito de la ilustración: Dror Cohen para la Fundación Mellon

DISCUSSION PARTICIPANTS

PARTICIPANTES DEL DEBATE

MODERATOR | Moderador

Elizabeth Alexander

PRESIDENT, MELLON FOUNDATIon

Presidente de la Fundación Mellon

Elizabeth Alexander is a poet, scholar, and cultural advocate who currently serves as president of the Mellon Foundation, the largest funder of the arts, culture, and humanities in the United States. A nationally recognized thought leader on race, justice, and American society, she has held distinguished professorships at Yale and Columbia Universities, and previously served as the director of Creativity and Free Expression at the Ford Foundation. Dr. Alexander is the author or co-author of fifteen books, including most recently The Trayvon Generation, and has twice been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. She composed and delivered the poem “Praise Song for the Day” for President Barack Obama's 2009 inauguration, and among her many honors she has been recognized as one of Time’s 100 Most Influential People.


For more information, please visit mellon.org or on X @ProfessorEA.

Elizabeth Alexander es poeta, académica y defensora de la cultura. Actualmente es presidenta de la Fundación Mellon, la mayor financiadora de las artes, la cultura y las humanidades en Estados Unidos. Líder de opinión reconocida a nivel nacional en materia de raza, justicia y sociedad estadounidense, ha sido profesora distinguida en las universidades de Yale y Columbia, y anteriormente ocupó el cargo de directora de Creatividad y Libre Expresión en la Fundación Ford. La Dra. Alexander es autora o coautora de quince libros, incluido el más reciente The Trayvon Generation, y ha sido dos veces finalista del Premio Pulitzer. Compuso e interpretó el poema “Praise Song for the Day” para la toma de posesión del presidente Barack Obama en 2009, y entre sus muchos honores ha sido reconocida como una de las 100 personas más influyentes de la revista Time.


Para obtener más información, visite mellon.org o en X @ProfessorEA.

Speaker

Lisa Lucas

professor, unc chapel hill; columnist, new york times; 2020 MacArthur fellow

Dr. Tressie McMillan Cottom is a professor in the School of Information and Library Science and principal investigator in the Center for Information, Technology, and Public Life at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, New York Times columnist, and 2020 MacArthur Fellow. Recent accolades include being named the 2023 winner of the Joseph B. and Toby Gittler Prize by Brandeis University for her “critical perspective and analysis to some of the greatest social challenges we face today.” McMillan Cottom’s most recent book, THICK: And Other Essays (The New Press 2019), won the Brooklyn Public Library’s 2019 Literary Prize and was shortlisted for the National Book Award in nonfiction.

 
For more information visit tressiemc.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) @tressiemcphd. 
 

Speaker | Oradora

Julián Castro

Chief executive officer, Latino Community Foundation

Director ejecutivo, Latino Community Foundation

Julián Castro serves as chief executive officer of the Latino Community Foundation, the nation’s largest Latino-serving foundation. Castro was elected to the San Antonio City Council in 2001 at age 26, then was elected mayor of San Antonio in 2009. The youngest mayor of a Top 50 American city at the time, Julian revitalized and transformed San Antonio into one of the country’s leading economies. In 2014, President Barack Obama appointed Castro US Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, where he served until the end of the Obama administration. In 2020, Castro ran for the Democratic nomination for President. He earned a BA from Stanford University and a law degree from Harvard Law School. His memoir, An Unlikely Journey: Waking Up From My American Dream, was published by Little Brown in 2018.

 
For more information, please visit latinocf.org.

 

Julián Castro se desempeña como director ejecutivo de la Latino Community Foundation, la fundación al servicio de los latinos más grande del país. Castro fue elegido para el Concejo Municipal de San Antonio en 2001 a la edad de 26 años, luego fue elegido alcalde de San Antonio en 2009. Julián, el alcalde más joven de una de las 50 principales ciudades estadounidenses en ese momento, revitalizó y transformó San Antonio en una de las principales economías del país. En 2014, el presidente Barack Obama nombró a Castro Secretario de Vivienda y Desarrollo Urbano de Estados Unidos, cargo que ocupó hasta el final de la administración de dicho presidente. En 2020, Castro se postuló para la nominación demócrata a la presidencia. Es licenciado por la Universidad de Stanford y licenciado en Derecho por la Facultad de Derecho de Harvard. Sus memorias, An Unlikely Journey: Waking Up From My American Dream, fueron publicadas por Little Brown en 2018.


Para obtener más información, visite latinocf.org.

Speaker | Oradora

Dr. Patrisia Gonzales

Emeritus Associate Professor, University of Arizona

Advisor to the Indigenous Alliance Without Borders

Profesora asociada emérita de la Universidad de Arizona

asesora de la alianza Indigenous Alliance Without Borders

Dr. Patrisia Gonzales is the grand/daughter of Kickapoo/Comanche and Macehual peoples, descending from three generations of bonesetters, herbalists, midwives, and traditional doctors. She is the author of Red Medicine: Traditional Indigenous Rites of Birthing and Healing (University of Arizona Press) and Traditional Indian Medicine (Kendall Hunt). She is a mother maker, baby catcher, and herbalist. For 15 years, she taught courses on Indigenous medicine at the University of Arizona and is internationally recognized for her expertise on Indigenous medicine. She advises the Indigenous Alliance Without Borders, the oldest Indigenous rights organization on the US-Mexico border. There, she directs a desert plant medicine project that gifts medicines to elders and Mother Earth protectors. Prior to becoming a professor, she was a nationally syndicated columnist (Universal Press Syndicate) and won several awards, including human rights awards, for her writings as a columnist and journalist and for her book, The Mud People: Crónicas, Reportajes y Testimonios.


For more information, please visit naair.arizona.edu/person/patrisia-gonzales o indigenousalliance.org.

La Dra. Patrisia Gonzales es nieta de Kickapoo/Comanche y Macehual, descendiente de tres generaciones de hueseros, herboristas, parteras y médicos tradicionales. Es autora de Red Medicine: Traditional Indigenous Rites of Birthing and Healing (University of Arizona Press) y Traditional Indian Medicine (Kendall Hunt). Es madre, cuidadora de niños y herborista. Durante 15 años, impartió cursos sobre medicina indígena en la Universidad de Arizona y es reconocida internacionalmente por su experiencia en este campo. Asesora a la alianza Indigenous Alliance Without Borders, la organización de derechos indígenas más antigua de la frontera entre Estados Unidos y México. Allí dirige un proyecto de medicina herbal del desierto que regala medicinas a los ancianos y a los protectores de la Madre Tierra. Antes de convertirse en profesora, fue columnista de circulación nacional (Universal Press Syndicate) y ganó varios premios, incluidos premios de derechos humanos, por sus escritos como columnista y periodista y por su libro The Mud People: Crónicas, Reportajes y Testimonios.


Para obtener más información, visite naair.arizona.edu/person/patrisia-gonzales o indigenousalliance.org.

Speaker | Oradora

Cristina Ibarra

Filmmaker AND Co-Founding Director of Borderlands Studios

Cineasta y directora cofundadora de Borderlands Studios

Cristina Ibarra’s 25-year filmmaking practice draws from her Tex-Mex, Spanglish, border-crossing roots. From The Infiltrators, Las Marthas to Dirty Laundry: A Homemade Telenovela, Ibarra’s storytelling engages with scripted, performance and documentary film practices. With numerous awards, including a 2021 MacArthur Fellowship, Ibarra aims to create a distinct border cinema. She is the Co-Founding Director of Borderlands Studios at Arizona State University in California and is an Associate Professor of Filmmaking Practice at ASU’s Sidney Poitier New American Film School.


For more information, please visit film.asu.edu/research/borderlands-studios.

La práctica cinematográfica de 25 años de Cristina Ibarra se nutre de sus raíces Tex-Mex, Spanglish y transfronterizas. Desde The Infiltrators, Las Marthas, hasta Dirty Laundry: A Homemade Telenovela, la narrativa de Ibarra se relaciona con prácticas cinematográficas guionadas, de performance y documentales. Con numerosos premios, incluida la Beca MacArthur 2021, Ibarra aspira a crear un cine fronterizo diferenciado. Es codirectora fundadora de Borderlands Studios en la Universidad Estatal de Arizona en California y profesora asociada de Práctica Cinematográfica en la Sidney Poitier New American Film School de la misma universidad.


Para obtener más información, visite film.asu.edu/research/borderlands-studios.

CONTACT US | CONTÁCTENOS

events@mellon.org

mellon.org/events

Illustration Detail: National Monument, Devils Tower in Wyoming. This monument has been recognized on the Department of Interior's website as historically significant to Indigenous communities. By artist Emilie Seto.

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