Performance-in-Place: Disappearing Acts @ 50 by LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs, 9/22

Performance, Brooklyn, NY, 2019. Credit: Akinfe Fatou. [Image Description: Performance artist LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs gives a public performance, reading from a book with title “TWERK” written in a graphic, red font on a blue background. She wears a…

Performance, Brooklyn, NY, 2019. Credit: Akinfe Fatou. [Image Description: Performance artist LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs gives a public performance, reading from a book with title “TWERK” written in a graphic, red font on a blue background. She wears a light brown head wrap, black eyeglasses, a black jacket, a black shirt, and two necklaces with each a golden medallion. In front of her are two microphones and two mixers on a table].

Tuesday, September 22
You can find out more about this event
here.

LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs is a writer, vocalist and sound artist who performed disappearing acts in 2018 at The 8th Floor. For Performance-In-Place, Diggs revisits her 2018 spoken word piece, commenting on feminism and misogyny - in the time of COVID - in a meditation comprised of found text, song lyrics, and multiple
languages. In her poetry, Diggs ruminates on the erasure that black and brown female bodies (of advanced years) encounter within society, the temporal nature of identity, and what it means to be a woman of color entering her 50s.

Writer, vocalist and performance/sound artist, LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs is the author of TwERK (Belladonna, 2013). Diggs has presented and performed at California Institute of the Arts, El Museo del Barrio, The Museum of Modern Art, and Walker Art Center and at festivals including: Explore the North Festival, Leeuwarden, Netherlands; Hekayeh Festival, Abu Dhabi; International Poetry Festival of Copenhagen; Ocean Space, Venice; International Poetry Festival of Romania; Question of Will, Slovakia; Poesiefestival, Berlin;  and the 2015 Venice Biennale.  As an independent curator, artistic director, and producer, Diggs has presented events for BAMCafé, Black Rock Coalition, El Museo del Barrio, Lincoln Center Out of Doors, and the David Rubenstein Atrium.  Diggs has received a 2020 C.D. Wright Award for Poetry from the Foundation of Contemporary Art, a Whiting Award (2016) and a National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellowship (2015), as well as grants and fellowships from Cave Canem, Creative Capital, New York Foundation for the Arts, and the U.S.-Japan Friendship Commission, among others. She lives in Harlem.

Anjuli Nanda