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675 18th Street, San Francisco, CA 94107

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Current members of the DPBS community (faculty, staff, and learners) who are interested in participating more formally in an experiential art experience are invited to join us for a workshop with artist Mojdeh Rezaeipour.

This workshop will invite participants to bring their own classroom experiences into their meaning-making, and explore how to use this to uphold democratic ideals, further anti-discrimination efforts, and engage in resiliency in their work.

Lunch will be provided to all workshop participants. It is strongly suggested that workshop participants also attend the morning artist talk.

This event is open only to current members of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and an RSVP is required.

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Mojdeh Rezaeipour is an Iranian-born transdisciplinary artist and storyteller. Incorporating analog collage methodologies across various mediums, Rezaeipour’s practice activates personal and collective archives through iterative long-term projects, collaborative research, and pedagogical engagement. Rezaeipour has collaborated with multiple academic institutions, including UCLA, University of Maryland, and Northwestern, to bring the Classroom Solidarities conversation to their communities.

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The UCSF Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences welcomes all participants to our events. If you need a reasonable accommodation to participate in this event because of a disability, please contact Anna Ardieta at anna.ardieta@ucsf.edu as soon as possible.

Please note: This is an in-person event. It will not be recorded. Space is very limited, but we will keep a waitlist for interested participants once the registration limit has been reached.

Event Details

UCSF promotes the exchange of diverse ideas and perspectives, acknowledging that the views and opinions of our guest speakers on campus are their own and may not reflect the perspective of the University. We embrace free speech in the pursuit of greater understanding, consistent with our obligations as a public university under the First Amendment.