Converge Detroit is happening Saturday, Oct. 19, 2019. The inaugural symposium will bring together artists, scholars, thinkers and do-ers to discuss the African American experience and culture. Held at the Detroit School of the Arts from 11:30 a.m. to 6 p.m., the conference will be followed by an artists’ reception celebrating the opening of the “Beyond Space” exhibition in the new Carr Center Contemporary Gallery at The Park Shelton.

“Converge Detroit” will center on the African American experience and explore both the practical and theoretical impact it has had in the creative sphere. Throughout the day, attendees will have an opportunity to hear short presentations from 14 invited artists and scholars covering a broad range of disciplines.

Complete details from The Carr Center team are below. Registration is open to all.

Ticket Information:

$25 admission includes entry to “Converge Detroit,” the “Beyond Space” exhibition and opening reception only. Tickets including entry to “Converge Detroit,” the “Beyond Space” exhibition and the opening reception, and the symposium and exhibit catalog, are $50.


The Carr Center Bringing Artists & Scholars Together with First-Ever “Converge Detroit” Conference

A day of talks & mentorship centering on the African American experience and the Arts

  • What ideas drive cutting edge creative work and theoretical practice?
  • Where can ideas with unrecognized revolutionary potential be explored? 

The Carr Center is uniting visionaries from all over the city of Detroit and beyond with its first-ever “Converge Detroit” conference. The day-long public event will bring artists, thinkers, academics and cultural workers together to consider the inaugural conference’s theme: Beyond Space: Unbounded Theory and Practice. “Converge Detroit” will be held Saturday, Oct. 19 at the Detroit School of Arts (123 Selden Street, Detroit, MI 48201) from 11:30am-6pm, followed by the opening of the “Beyond Space” exhibition and artist reception at 7 p.m.

“Converge Detroit” will center on the African American experience and explore both the practical and theoretical impact it has had in the creative sphere. Throughout the day, attendees will have an opportunity to hear short presentations from 14 invited artists and scholars covering a broad range of disciplines.

Among those slated to speak on their work and the theme of the day is Adama Delphine Fawundu, a visual artist with an MFA from Columbia University who combines photography, video, assemblage and other media to create an artistic language.

The event will also feature Angela Hennessy, an Oakland-based artist and Associate Professor at California College of the Arts who explores “mythologies of blackness embedded in linguistic metaphors of color and cloth” through writing, performance and studio work.

Also scheduled to speak is “Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness” author Simone A. Browne, who continues to explore themes of surveillance as a Yale University Visiting Presidential Fellow (2018-2019) and as an Associate Professor in the University of Texas at Austin’s Department of African and African Diaspora Studies.

“We’re very excited to have these incredible speakers and more joining us for what we plan to be the first ‘Converge Detroit’ gathering,” says Oliver Ragsdale Jr., President of the Carr Center.

“Converge Detroit” will serve as an artistic laboratory as well, fostering opportunities for mentorship and peer-to-peer discussion, with a particular emphasis on the intersection of the arts and the black experience.

“The goal is for people to leave renewed and affirmed because they met someone, talked to someone, listened to someone or were listened to,” said Erin Falker, Carr Center Curator and Senior Creative Director.

Described as an “exploration-through-exhibition,” “Beyond Space” will feature the work of the Carr Center Independent Scholars, curated and led by Carrie Mae Weems, Carr Center resident artist in visual art and a 2013 MacArthur Fellow.

“I really hope that ‘Converge Detroit’ becomes a place to be heard and that a real community forms around everyone who takes the mic. I want people to use it to network and to meet like-minded people,” said Falker. “But, mostly, I want ‘Converge Detroit’ to be the place where the ideas that are going to change how people think tomorrow get heard today.”

Click here to visit The Carr Center online.