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Moody Center for the Arts
Wednesday, November 12
6:00pm - 7:30pm
Artists-in-Dialogue: Berenice Olmedo + Medical Humanities

About the Event

About the participants:

Berenice Olmedo (b. 1987, Oaxaca, Mexico; based in Mexico City, Mexico) is known for her sculptures and kinetic objects, in which she often integrates prostheses and orthotics. Her fusions of body parts challenge the notion of human wholeness and draw attention to the political dimensions of disability, illness, and care. The artist engages with standardized expectations of our bodies and explores the extent to which external aids are
essential to human existence. By reusing forms and materials from the medical field, she challenges the pursuit of efficiency and seamless perfection in favor of a more physical, political, and existential contemporary experience. After graduating from the Universidad de las Américas in Puebla, Olmedo participated in a study program at SOMA in Mexico City.

Kirsten Ostherr, PhD, MPH is the Gladys Louise Fox Professor of English and founding Director of the new Medical Humanities Research Institute, one of the only research institutes in the world that is solely dedicated to advancing translational research on human experiences of health and illness. She is also founding Director of the Medical Humanities program (2016-present) and the Medical Futures Lab (2012-present) at Rice University in Houston, Texas. She recently served as Chair of the English Department (2020-2023). Ostherr is a media scholar, health researcher, and technology analyst.

Dr. Ricardo Nuila, M.D. ’06, is a practicing internal medicine doctor and hospitalist serving at Ben Taub Hospital in Houston, Texas. He serves as an associate professor of medicine, medical ethics and health policy at Baylor College of Medicine. Dr. Nuila also is the director of the Humanities Expression and Arts Lab program at Baylor, which develops educational materials and experiences that weave the arts and humanities into medical education. Over his career as a practicing physician, Dr. Nuila’s first-hand experiences have fueled his writing on health disparities, healthcare policy and the interface between art and medicine.

Directions & Parking

The Moody Center for the Arts is located on the campus of Rice University, and is best reached by using Campus Entrance 8 at the intersection of University Boulevard and Stockton Street. As you enter campus, the building is on the right, just past the Media Center. There is a dedicated parking lot adjacent to the building. Payment for the Moody Lot is by credit card only. Maps are available at rice.edu/maps.

Please note: Our address is the general address to Rice University. To find us on campus, enter “Moody Center for the Arts” on Google or Apple maps.

Location

Moody Center for the Arts

6100 Main Street, MS-480
Houston, TX 77005
United States