By Vanessa Carr
Bay Area multimedia project Plain Human calls this Tuesday, March 11th "Prisoner Awareness Day." They ask that people wear orange – the color of most prison uniforms – in an effort to spark daily conversation about imprisonment and its effects on our communities. They also invite the public to participate in a group exercise regiment demonstration/performance outside of City Hall on Tuesday from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.
"We want to break the silence that we carry as family members and members of communities that are criminalized," says San Francisco-based artist and Plain Human founder Mabel Negrete.
With a brother in prison, Negrete has personally experienced the rippling effects of incarceration in a family. Negrete worries that her brother, who struggles with mental illness and is one of many inmates who has acquired Hepatitis C inside prison walls, may never be able to return to normal life.
"His condition [since going to prison] has worsened because there is no rehabilitation for him to overcome the isolation of the incarceration," says Negrete. "I am not sure that he can come out of that. Conditions are such that people cannot improve."
Plain Human is part of the year-long Prison Project at Intersection for the Arts, which has featured a wide range of programs since it started in early 2007, from multiple gallery installations and a day-long conference in February 2008 featuring Angela Davis as its keynote, to a pen pal project that connects incarcerated and non-incarcerated artists. The Prison Project's closing exhibition, featuring artwork from both sides of the prison walls, will be on display through March 29, 2008.
Negrete contributed an installation and performance piece to the closing installation reflecting on both her experience with an imprisoned family member. She mapped a floor plan of two physical spaces of comparable size – her own bathroom and her brother's cell – and created a plaster wall that mimics the texture of concrete, on which she etched the text of some of her brothers letters.

Plain Human also created an installation piece for this exhibition: a functional campaign office space inside of the gallery, which they have actually used as an administrative office for their organizing activities.

Also on March 11: Live from Death Row - A Part of The Prison Project: A Continuing Multi-Disciplinary Exploration
7:30pm, $5-$15
A live amplified phone conversation with artist and death row prisoner James P. Anderson. This event also features author Barbara Becnel, representatives from Campaign to End the Death Penalty, and death row prisoner family members and exonerated death row prisoners in a community conversation about the death penalty.
Photos by Anna L Conti via CC.
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Comments (1)
Hepatitis C among those incarcerated is approaching epidemic proportions. See this article for more information. Thanks for participating in the awareness.
http://www.hepatitis-central.com/mt/archives/2007/03/hcv_in_us_priso.html
Posted by Hepatitis C | March 10, 2008 02:33 PM