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  1. Marking Time encompasses an award-winning book, a traveling exhibition, and ongoing public programs and collaborations highlighting artists working to end mass incarceration and issues impacting imprisoned people, their loved ones, and communities.

  2. Sep 17, 2020 · An exhibition of art by incarcerated and nonincarcerated artists that explores the impact and scale of life under carceral conditions. See works by more than 35 artists, including American Artist, Jesse Krimes, and Sable Elyse Smith, and learn about their stories and strategies.

  3. Marking Time: Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration explores the impact of the US prison system on contemporary visual art. This exhibition highlights artists who are or have been incarcerated alongside artists who have not been incarcerated but whose practices interrogate the carceral state.

  4. MARK TIME definition: 1. to march in one place without moving forward 2. to do little while waiting for something that is…. Learn more.

  5. Marking Time is a travelling exhibition that explores the impact of punitive governance, policing, and imprisonment on millions of people in the US and Canada. It features artists who are or have been incarcerated, and those who expose aspects of the carceral state through their work.

  6. Sep 17, 2020 · An exhibition of art by incarcerated and nonincarcerated artists that explores the impact and scale of life under carceral conditions. See works by American Artist, Tameca Cole, Jesse Krimes, and more across PS1's first floor galleries.

  7. Oct 27, 2020 · A show of works by artists who have been or are incarcerated in the US, exploring themes of carceral aesthetics, memory, and humanity. The exhibition, organized by Nicole R. Fleetwood, is part of a larger movement of art-making that challenges the punitive system of mass incarceration.