The Caged Bird Screams: Noise Awareness Day 2024

The Caged Bird Screams - Noise Awareness Day 2024

Wednesday April 24, 2024

Mason Exhibitions organized a captivating spectacle of collaborative performances exploring the ways sound art, visual art, and performance art can transcend space, borders, and carcerality, and explore themes of isolation, destruction, and transformation.

This event is an extension of the Faces of Resilience exhibitions in Buchanan Atrium Gallery during Fall 2023 and Mason Exhibitions Arlington during Spring 2024.

Artist Maria Gaspar shared her sonic sculpture, ‘We Lit the Fire and Trusted the Heat (After Angela Davis)’, a series of iron cell bars salvaged from the deconstructed Cook County Jail in Chicago, to be transfigured by Mason students and faculty into an experimental experience through touch, sound, and vibrations.

Dr. Thomas Stanley’s Sound Art students developed artworks incorporating sounds from ‘We Lit the Fire’, which were mixed into an original performance by Professor Stanley and Mason alumni musician Jamal Moore.


Did you know that the state of VA has 131 active carceral facilities? Maria Gaspar’s Disappearance Jail project records the eventual erasure of carceral geographies in each of the 50 states within the US.

Prints depicting current prisons, jails, and immigrant detention facilities are obscured through perforations using a hole puncher. Images are sourced online, while others can only be sourced through specialized databases or satellite imagery.

The penetrations enact the abolition of carceral sites. Through the gesture of perforation, the sites are rendered fragile – susceptible to disintegration by the slightest touch. Participatory community events or “Punch Parties” have occurred or are planned for Illinois, California, Ohio, Virginia, and Washington. Each state is perforated within the state and by local community members.


Professor Brian Davis and his Advanced Sculpture students presented a collaborative kinetic sculpture after a lesson with artist Stephanie Mercedes.

Special thanks to Brittany Hunter, Houry Kandoyan, Peter Pattengill and Jon Sotelo, who performed a section from Stephanie Mercedes’ destruction opera piece entitled “Never In Our Image”.

Event Images Courtesy Evan Cantwell (Creative Services GMU)

This event was generously supported by George Mason University’s College of Visual and Performing Arts, the School of Art, and the University Life Programming Grant.

Head Above the Water

Head Above the Water: Respecting the Power of Water Through Artmaking, Storytelling, and Flood Risk Mitigation Awareness

JUNE 24, 2023

Oxon Run and Watts Branch, Washington, DC

Organized by the City as Living Laboratory (CALL), Mason Exhibitions, WEACT for Environmental Justice, and others!

Artists Cary Michael Robinson and Nicole Salimbene, along with environmental scientists and community organizers, facilitated a day of walking/talking/making along Watts Branch & Oxon Run streams and neighborhoods. This event served as an invitation to honor the power of water through creative expression, and to learn more about the flood risks and mitigation programs/actions to protect the community and the surrounding waterways in Ward 7 and Ward 8.

WALK LEADERS

Dr. Alsean Bryant, Strategic Support Team Clinical Pharmacist at the AIDS Healthcare Foundation for the DC, MD, and VA region

Dr. Travis Gallo, Assistant Professor in Urban Ecology and Conservation in the Department of Environmental Science and Technology at the University of Maryland

Brenda Richardson, Coordinator for the Anacostia Parks & Community Collaborative (APACC) & Vice-Chair of the Friends of Oxon Run Park

Cary Michael Robinson, Interdisciplinary and Mixed Media Artist.

Nicole Salimbene, Interdisciplinary Artist

Dr. Jennifer Sklarew, Assistant Professor, Energy and Sustainability Policy, Food-Energy-Water-Climate Nexus, Social Science, George Mason University

Absalom Jordan, Chair, Friends of Oxon Run Park

Jaren Hill Lockridge, Director, The Well at Oxon Run

Made possible with support from the DC Department of Energy and the Environment and FEMA