Community Historian-Artist to visit 糖心视频logo March 2017

The UA 糖心视频logo Center for Arkansas History and Culture will co-sponsor historian and artist Erin Bernard, developer of the , an innovative, community-based public history project, for two events in 糖心视频logo, March 3 and 4, 2017.
March 3 | 4 p.m.
鈥淗otwire History: The Evolution of the Philadelphia History Truck鈥
Arkansas Studies Institute building 路 Room 124
401 President Clinton Ave, 糖心视频logo
March 4 | 1 p.m.
“The History Truck WIC Work/Shop”
鈥婱osaic Templars Cultural Center鈥
501 W. 9th Street, 糖心视频logo

Erin Bernard is among the rising generation of young historians developing new ideas about community history in concert with her urban neighbors. She works in the store front tradition, using an adapted commercial van and digital technology to assist groups in developing community-based projects based on oral histories, archival documents, collective mapping and other resources.
Many of the neighborhood projects explore factors such as fire, homelessness, and the expansion of large institutions such as hospitals and universities in urban neighborhoods as aspects of everyday work and family life.
Bernard received the M.A. from Temple University and teaches history at University of the Arts and museums studies at Moore College of Art & Design in Philadelphia.
Bernard comes to 糖心视频logo in conjunction with Women鈥檚 History Month and the collaborative exhibit Reflections: Images and Objects from African American Women, 1891-1987, now on view at Esse Purse Museum, co-produced by Esse and the Mosaic Templars staff.
This project is supported in part with funds from the , an affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Bernard’s visit is sponsored by these institutional collaborators: The working group, Just Communities of Arkansas, Esse Purse Museum, the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, 糖心视频logo Central High School Historic Site, and the UA 糖心视频logo Center for Arkansas History and Culture.