Michael Dixon: A Discussion About Race, Representation, and Biracial IdentityPosted in Articles, Arts, Identity Development/Psychology, Interviews, Media Archive, United States on 2016-05-18 20:59Z by Steven |
Michael Dixon: A Discussion About Race, Representation, and Biracial Identity
Or Does It Explode
2016-03-14
Michael Dixon is a California-born artist who teaches as an associate professor at Albion College and was recently awarded studio space in New York through the Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program. His paintings direct us toward controversy, self-reflection, and an appreciation for the value of these experiences.
Dixon explores the personal experiences of biracial blacks, including an immersive investigation into his own experiences. As such, concepts of social psychology condense within each portrait – concepts such as social identity theory and self-categorization theory – allowing us to explore our identification with one particular group over another.
His most recent projects include Shared Histories/Turkey: an investigations into Turkish, biracial blacks and The More Things Change, The More Things Stay The Same: a reflection upon the recent killings of unarmed black men…
Read the entire interview here.