Here is a link to a recent interview I did with Claire Counihan at the Carolina Women's Center.

Susan Harbage Page, an assistant professor in the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies, was a Faculty Scholar with the Carolina Women’s Center in 2014-2015. Her project, “Objects from the Borderlands,” documents items lost or left behind by people crossing the Mexico-US border and creates an “anti-archive” of fragments from those individuals’ lives and experiences. You can see more about her U.S.-Mexico Border Project, as well as her other works, on her personal website. She also has a blog, where she posts about a range of topics. She also recently interviewed with Don’t You Lie to Me, a visual arts podcast.

Excited to have a work from the series Palimpsest in this exhibition with artists I admire greatly Susan Martin, Pinky Bass, Alice Sebrell, and Ed Ruscha.  

Here is a link to find out more. https://news-prod.wcu.edu/2019/06/cultivating-collections-on-display-through-july-26-at-fine-art-museum/

Western Carolina University’s Fine Art Museum is highlighting its permanent collection this summer with a new exhibition, “Cultivating Collections,” that opened June 4.

Forgot to post this earlier this spring when it ran on WUNC's "The State of Things"with Frank Stasio. The WUNC team did a great job producing this.

Here is a link for listening.

I hope you'll check out this interview by Lizzy Cheatham-McNairy on her new blog Matrons and Mistreses. Photos by Olly Yung.

Read the full interview here.

We speak of the moon and the double standards present in the lyrics of a current country song. Susan points out the often violent language used when discussing photography and why she chooses to use words such as made and created over shot and took.
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