Co-host University of Arkansas School of Art 1st Year MFA student Trent Bozeman in Conversation with Andre Ramos-Woodard.
Raised in the Southern states of Tennessee and Texas, André Ramos-Woodard (he/ they) is a contemporary artist who uses their work to emphasize the repercussions of contemporary and historical discrimination. Primarily working with photo-based collage, text, and drawing, they convey ideas of communal and personal identity centralized within internal conflicts. Ramos-Woodard is influenced by their direct experience with life – he is queer and African American, both of which are obvious targets for discrimination. They use their art to accent spaces of both communal understanding and disconnect between them and the viewer, specifically those of Black liberation, queer justice, and those in positions of power and privilege that lack the information to critically recognize problems within minority groups in contemporary culture. Ramos-Woodard received his BFA from Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas, and is currently pursuing his MFA at The University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
https://www.andreramoswoodard.com/
https://www.instagram.com/andreduane/?hl=en
https://www.inthein-between.com/andre-ramos-woodard/
http://lenscratch.com/2020/07/andre-ramos-woodard-a-mediocre-ass-nigga/
https://www.photographersofcolor.org/
https://www.instagram.com/photogsofcolor/
https://twitter.com/photogsofcolor