Salt Lake City, UT – Nov. 2, 2021 Craft Lake City’s powerful new exhibition Celebration of the Hand: Safe Not Safe was conceived by Denae Shanidiin with photographs by Jonathan Canlas.
On view from Nov. 1, 2021 to Jan. 31, 2022, Safe Not Safe is an ongoing project exploring Utah’s BIPOC community and their experiences living here. Individuals were asked to present themselves in a space where they felt the safest as well as a space where they did not feel “safe”. They were then photographed in each place and asked to reveal their thoughts and feelings on each location.
Craft Lake City’s Celebration Of The Hand: Safe Not Safe exhibition features eight works from the ongoing series from Shanidiin and Canlas.
“As BIPOC & 2SLGBTQIA Relatives we acknowledge and celebrate our resilience within a world that actively harms us,” says Shanidiin. “These are true accounts of hatred, sexual assault and abuse experienced. Honoring survivors and the actuality of what it is like for BIPOC & 2SLGBTQIA existing within spaces of white supremacy, racism, patriarchy, homophobia, classism, misogyny, xenophobia and domestic violence is important in creating safety and healing.”
Craft Lake City’s Celebration of the Hand project is a seasonal outdoor exhibition with an initiative to enhance and reflect Salt Lake City’s cultural district through the work of Utah-based artists. Celebration of the Hand is displayed in large 4 ‘ X 8 ‘ frames adjacent to the sidewalks along Broadway (300 South) between 200 West and West Temple, and is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week free of charge.
“Through Celebration of the Hand, Craft Lake City seeks to democratize art by providing public access to bodies of artistic work by making them accessible at any time of the day or week for no cost,” says Angela H. Brown, executive director of Craft Lake City. “It’s important for artistic bodies of work like Safe Not Safe to have accessible representation on the streets of downtown Salt Lake City.”
The public will have the opportunity to participate in a virtual discussion about Safe Not Safe on noon Wed., Nov. 10. Craft Lake City will host a free virtual Lunch & Learn lead by, Kaneischa Johnson, an inclusive leadership and culture advocate This online event is an opportunity for the public to share ideas and ask questions about the new public art exhibition in downtown Salt Lake City.
Celebration of the Hand: Safe Not Safe is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts, The Zoo, Arts & Parks (ZAP) Program, The Utah Division of Arts & Museums, The Temporary Museum of Permanent Change, the Salt Lake City Arts Council, the Center for the Living City, and the George S. and Dolores Doré Eccles Foundation.
About Craft Lake City:
Founded in 2009 by Angela H. Brown, Executive Editor of SLUG (Salt Lake UnderGround) Magazine, Craft Lake City® is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization with the mission to educate, promote and inspire local artisans while elevating the creative culture of the Utah arts community through science, technology and art. Craft Lake City strives to further define the term “Craft,” by modernizing the definition for handmade creativity.
craftlakecity.com @craftlakecity
About Safe Not Safe:
Safe Not Safe is an ongoing project exploring BIPOC in Utah who were asked to present themselves in a space where they felt the safest at this time in their life as well as a space where they do not feel “safe.”
All Images By: Jonathan Canlas
Project Concept By: Denae Shanidiin
https://www.instagram.com/safe.notsafe/ @safe.notsafe
About the Temporary Museum of Permanent Change:
The Temporary Museum of Permanent Change is a community based, participatory project that uses the ever-changing development processes underway in Salt Lake City as catalysts to animate city life. The Museum engages a variety of audiences using a collaborative, multidisciplinary approach that includes performance art and video production, visual art, urban archaeology, anthropology, local history, existing businesses and ongoing deconstruction and construction processes as spectacles for people of all ages. Together these elements provide teachable moments in our efforts to manage and celebrate change. This museum has no specific address. Rather it is a construction of ideas, installations and illuminations that comprise a new way of seeing our city.
About the Center for Living City:
The Center for the Living City’s purpose is to expand the understanding of the complexity of contemporary urban life and through it, promote increased civic engagement among people who care deeply for their communities. The Center provides portals for community engagement through the lens of urban ecology to further the understanding of the interconnected human and ecological systems in our communities. The Center’s multi-disciplinary approach to community engagement is applied through educational programs, collaborative projects, fellowships, on-line portals, workshops and publications.
centerforthelivingcity.org @centerforthelivingcity