Join us at School One on September 18, from 4-5 pm, when printmaker and activist, Lois Harada, will speak about how she utilizes text and the medium of posters to tell her family’s story of incarceration — her paternal grandmother was interned in Poston, Arizona from 1942 -1945.
Lois Harada is an artist and printmaker working in Providence, Rhode Island. She studied printmaking at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) and settled in Providence after graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2010. She works at DWRI Letterpress, a commercial letterpress printshop where she also prints her own work. Harada utilizes text and the medium of the poster to tell her family’s story of incarceration — her paternal grandmother was interned in Poston, Arizona from 1942 -1945. She takes inspiration from propaganda printed and distributed by the United States government and prints with type and equipment similar to that which would have created the original works. Harada has exhibited her work across the United States and internationally.
Her work is included in private collections as well as the RISD Museum. She has served on the board of New Urban Arts, a nationally recognized free, arts drop-in program. In 2022, she started a second term as a City Commissioner, and first as Chairperson, on the Art in City Life Commission serving the city of Providence and has recently joined the Dirt Palace Public Projects board. In 2022, she rejoined RISD to teach in Printmaking Department and the Graphic Design Department.
https://www.loisharada.com