© Deborah Espinosa
Community Outreach & Engagement
Connecting with an audience is an essential component of a photographic project. Community outreach is vital in fostering interest and funding to support the work. Join Deborah Espinosa, attorney and visual storyteller, for the Community Outreach & Engagement Seminar and learn about developing community-based projects, working directly with the public, and tips for effective collaborative practices.
Joining Deborah will be guest speaker Arin Yoon, a Korean American documentary photographer and visual artist whose work focuses on the military community and the impacts of war, notions of family, women and issues of identity and representation.
WHEN • Wednesday, March 13, 2024, from 12:30 - 2 PM MT
WHERE • Hosted online through Zoom
HOW • Pre-registration is required - registration closes at 11:30am MT.
Missed it? Sign up as a member to get recordings to this and other seminars.
Registration
The Project Lab Seminar is provided free of charge to current CENTER Members. Become a member now and access this and all of the previous seminars. If you are already a member, please email us directly for access to the recordings.
Note - registration is closed for the live event.
Course Presentation • $0 Member // $25 Non-Member
CAN’T AFFORD THE REGISTRATION FEE? • Registration Fee Waivers are available on a case-by-case basis for those who cannot afford the registration fees for whatever reason. To apply, you must fill out our Registration Fee Waiver Request Form before the Fee Waiver deadline of March 8, 2024.
CANCELLATION • You may cancel minus a $10 processing fee until March 8, 2024
RECORDING • This seminar is now available as a recording. Please contact us for access.
Deborah Espinosa, MA, JD, combines her legal and multimedia storytelling skills to advocate for the rights of the poor and marginalized, both in the U.S. and in Africa. She also works to strengthen those rights, providing legal technical assistance to state and national governments in the global south. She believes that multimedia storytelling is one of the most powerful advocacy tools for the reform of unjust law and policy. Her work has been exhibited in multiple cities in Washington State as well as in San Francisco, Brooklyn, and in Winnipeg at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights. In support of Living with Conviction, she has received multiple city and state grants, and she was chosen for the inaugural cohort of We, Women artists, an award which recognizes women, transgender, and non-binary photographers whose projects are rooted in community engagement and collaboration.
Deborah is a graduate of the Artist Trust EDGE Program for Visual Artists and holds a Certificate in Photography from the Rocky Mountain School of Photography, a JD from the University of Washington School of Law, a MA from the Jackson School of International Studies at the University of Washington, and a BA in History from the University of California at Berkeley.
Supporter
The Project Labs: Seminars are made possible by the Phillip and Edith Leonian Foundation.