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Wednesday, October 7
 

9:00am EDT

Mapping What We Have: Community Asset Mapping as Visual Literacy and Place-Based Practice
Wednesday October 7, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
What does it mean to truly see the resources within a community? This session examines community asset mapping as a visual literacy practice, one that makes tangible the often-invisible networks of support that exist within places and communities.


Drawing on two distinct contexts, this presentation examines how the act of physically mapping community assets transforms the way people understand and engage with their environments. The first is a North Carolina statewide digital inclusion initiative, in which a public-facing tech resource finder enables residents to search for free wi-fi, computer access, and digital literacy training by location and resource type—transforming an abstract service landscape into a searchable, visual map. The second involves preservice teachers in a scholarship program designed to prepare future educators for high-needs districts in eastern North Carolina. As part of their preparation, teacher candidates research and map community assets in their future student teaching districts; they also collaboratively mapped their own university campus—identifying support offices, study spaces, dining spots, and more. The collaborative mapping process proved especially powerful: it helped candidates articulate what they already knew about their campus, sparked discussion around newly shared discoveries, and encouraged more intentional exploration of their environment.


Both cases illustrate how visual representation activates an asset-based mindset, helping users recognize resources they might otherwise overlook. In dialogue with the conference theme, Seeing Through Time, this session positions asset maps as place-bound mnemonic images, representations that encode community knowledge, reflect the positionality of their makers, and shape how groups understand and narrate their own resources.


Following a brief presentation, participants will engage in a hands-on mapping activity, creating a visual representation of their own support networks and reflecting on the power of asset-based, place-centered seeing.
Speakers
avatar for Samantha Duke

Samantha Duke

Doctoral Student, North Carolina State University
Samantha Duke is a Ph.D. candidate in Teacher Education and Learning Sciences: Literacy and English Language Arts Education at North Carolina State University. She studies preservice teacher preparation and support and aims to create spaces of belonging in which students are empowered... Read More →
Wednesday October 7, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
Studio

10:30am EDT

“Good friends?”: 20th-century LGBTQ+ love and representation in archival instruction
Wednesday October 7, 2026 10:30am - 11:00am EDT
We all have heard the story: Two people of the same sex living their lives together being labeled as “good friends” despite evidence that would suggest that these people were very much in love with each other. This narrative turns into erasure of LGBTQ+ people in history. But what if we had confirmation of these stories thanks to photographs? And what if we used those photographs as not only evidence but as a teaching opportunity?
In Cornell University Library’s Rare and Manuscript Collections, the Human Sexuality Collection houses several personal photograph albums of LGBTQ+ couples and their communities. These photographs give representation to moments of queer love and joy – unfortunately, not always the story we get to tell when discussing LGBTQ+ people in history. Examples include:
Several of the albums lack details such as names and clear dates – highlighting some of the challenges of archival research. When used in archival instruction, these albums provide students with opportunities to practice visual literacy skills as well as how to explore an item’s materiality for clues when words fail us. Additionally, these albums open the door for conversations about concepts like archival silences, historic collecting practices, and current efforts to better document diverse lived experiences.
Speakers
avatar for Emily Beran

Emily Beran

Research and Instruction Librarian, Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library
Emily Beran (she/her) is the Research and Instruction Librarian in the Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library. With a background in art history, she tries to incorporate different visual media including manuscript illumination, prints, and photographs... Read More →
Wednesday October 7, 2026 10:30am - 11:00am EDT
Studio

11:00am EDT

Rage Against the Archive: Visual Literacy and the Afterlives of Colonial Photography
Wednesday October 7, 2026 11:00am - 11:30am EDT
Rage Against the Archive is a practice-based research project that examines how colonial photographs can get decontextualized in digital archives, losing their gravitas. This project focuses on "The People of India" (1868–75)—a British ethnographic publication produced after the 1857 Sepoy Mutiny to classify and document colonized natives. The camera functioned as an imperial tool of surveillance and governance, producing visual records that categorized Indian subjects through a racialized lens. These images, originally embedded in ethnographic frameworks that categorized Indian subjects, now circulate online through digitized collections such as the New York Public Library (NYPL), where they are searchable, downloadable, and are also sold as fine art prints. 


As these images move from colonial archive to museum websites, their context transforms. Digitization reframes these historical documents as aestheticized commodities, often detached from the power structures that shaped their production. This project asks: How can artists critically engage with institutional archives to interrogate the circulation of colonial images and foster visual literacy in our networked image culture?

Methodologically, this project employs browser-based interventions within NYPL’s online archive. Through real-time HTML editing and a custom browser extension, colonial images are replaced with critical texts, and the commercial purchase options associated with these images are disrupted in an act of Electronic civil disobedience. By intervening directly in the interface through which archival images are accessed, this project demonstrates how digital platforms shape the interpretation of historical photographs. This project critically scrutinizes whether institutional archives like NYPL perpetuate colonial exploitation, raising ethical questions about how we all should consume images of historical atrocities online. Transforming the browser into a performative and pedagogical site, Rage Against the Archive demonstrates that visual literacy today must extend beyond interpreting images themselves to critically examining the technological and institutional systems that organize their display, circulation, and meaning.

Speakers
avatar for Anshul Roy

Anshul Roy

PhD student, University of Colorado Boulder
Anshul Roy (b. 1997, India) is a visual artist with an MFA in Art Photography (2024) from Syracuse University in New York and a B.Tech in Bioengineering (2020) from the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur. Currently, he is a PhD student in the Critical Media Practices department... Read More →
Wednesday October 7, 2026 11:00am - 11:30am EDT
Studio

11:00am EDT

When Words Enhance Vision: The Role of Audio Description
Wednesday October 7, 2026 11:00am - 11:30am EDT
Following a brief introduction to audio description as a form of accessible intersemiotic translation, this paper advances the hypothesis that, although AD was originally conceived for individuals with visual impairments, this practice could be broadened to encompass a wider, general audience. This constitutes the central claim of our study.
To this end, we present, on the one hand, a fragment from a filmic work whose mise-en-scène features sculptures by a renowned artist, accompanied by various audio descriptions in different languages relating to the same excerpt. This presentation offers an opportunity to reflect on the intended audience, their cultural background, and the reach or dissemination of the artist as conveyed through cinema. On the other hand, we include the audio description of a building of significant architectural interest.
The translation of images makes it possible to introduce, in a brief and concise manner, specific information about the artist, the artwork, or its compositional elements, and even to clarify particular terms. In this sense, it constitutes a valuable tool in the service of education.
Such reflections ultimately serve to confirm or challenge the hypothesis proposed herein.
Speakers
MV

María Valero Gisbert

Associate Professor, University of Parma
Associate Professor at Parma Universtiy (Italy). Research aereas: Audio description, Audiiovisual Translation; Lexicography.
Wednesday October 7, 2026 11:00am - 11:30am EDT
Studio

1:30pm EDT

Face2Face: From Lamprey Grid's to the Bounding Box
Wednesday October 7, 2026 1:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
What does it mean to encounter someone’s face across time? Face2Face is a research-based art project that draws conceptual parallels between 19th-century anthropological photography and contemporary facial recognition systems, critically examining how images function as enduring tools for classification, surveillance, and ideological control. Both of these forms of “scopic regimes of modernity” view photos as unbiased, objective data that can help in understanding human identity and character through facial structure analysis. 


This project draws on the photographic archive of the British colonial administrator Maurice Vidal Portman, who, in the 1890s, photographed the native people of the Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean. These images were produced using Lamprey’s Grid system, a chequered backdrop designed for anthropometric measurement. Colonial subjects were often posed nude, with measuring sticks against the grid. Their bodies became measurable visual evidence for imperial knowledge systems that advanced a pseudoscientific theory of racial hierarchy. Today, these violative images circulate through digital archives such as the British Museum, where they exist as visual datasets.


Face2Face is an interactive art installation that recreates this colonial photographer’s studio and reimagines his lens as a facial recognition system that categorizes the audience. This system is trained on a biased dataset derived from Portman's images and related writings. Here, the colonial archive is transformed into an active computational apparatus—one that gazes at and classifies viewers according to antiquated logics. Through real-time algorithmic categorization, the viewer is placed in the position of the original subject. This encounter foregrounds how these vision systems produce knowledge by reducing humans to data while obscuring their subjectivity. These archival interventions collapse the past and present by tracing a continuum between anthropological photography and computer vision. Face2Face employs historical images not as passive vessels of memory but as active materials that inform visual literacy and cultural memory.
Speakers
avatar for Anshul Roy

Anshul Roy

PhD student, University of Colorado Boulder
Anshul Roy (b. 1997, India) is a visual artist with an MFA in Art Photography (2024) from Syracuse University in New York and a B.Tech in Bioengineering (2020) from the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur. Currently, he is a PhD student in the Critical Media Practices department... Read More →
SH

Srikar Hari

PhD student, University of Colorado Boulder
Srikar Hari (b. 1993, India) is a visual artist, currently pursuing his PhD in the Critical Media Practices department of the University of Colorado Boulder. He holds an MFA in Photography from Rhode Island School of Design, USA and a Bachelor’s in Digital Video Production from... Read More →
Wednesday October 7, 2026 1:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Studio

2:00pm EDT

The Family Album of Lucybelle Crater: Recalling the Artist, Family, and the Newly Imagined
Wednesday October 7, 2026 2:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Ralph Eugene Meatyard, an optician and self-trained photographer, is known for his abject works. Influenced by writers such as Ambrose Bierce and William Blake, Meatyard’s work explores links between real and imagined worlds which come to life in his photographs. Leveraging techniques such as long and double exposure, Meatyard elevates simple landscapes into dreamscapes. Would-be basic portraits are transformed into stills from horror films as grotesquely masked figures stand in abandoned, decaying spaces. What is abject to viewers, though, is familiar for Meatyard: his family and friends are often the subjects of these photographs, transformed into monsters through the masks. His final body of work, The Family Album of Lucybelle Crater, exemplifies this juxtaposition of strangers and family, playing upon the family artifact of photo albums by inserting unfamiliar, anonymized characters into what is typically used to remember family and precious memories. For Meatyard, this family album is multipurpose. It documents his family and friends, just like a photo album, captures his spirit as an artist, and also carries a narrative that must be supplied by the viewer. The anonymity and dreamlike atmosphere of his pieces abstracts the mundane just enough that viewers can project their stories upon the images. Thus, The Family Album becomes the perfect space to examine photographs as mnemonic devices that allow us to recall and create. This presentation will provide a brief overview of Ralph Eugene Meatyard, then dive into an exploration of his final body of work, The Family Album of Lucybelle Crater, examining how its numerous meanings can help researchers, educators, and viewers explore new ways to leverage photographs as mnemonic devices.
Speakers
avatar for Micaela Deogracias

Micaela Deogracias

Outreach and Engagement Librarian, Indiana University Bloomington
Micaela Deogracias is currently an Outreach and Engagement Librarian at Indiana University Bloomington. At the IUB Education Library, she is responsible for creating instructional opportunities to support students in the School of Education, particularly those relating to visual literacy... Read More →
Wednesday October 7, 2026 2:00pm - 2:30pm EDT
Studio

3:00pm EDT

Behind the Handbook: Editing and Curating Perspectives on Visual Inquiry
Wednesday October 7, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
This presentation reflects on the editorial and curatorial process behind the Handbook of Visual Inquiry: Methods and Pedagogies for Visual Literacy. The aim of the book is to provide a comprehensive, accessible, and critically grounded resource on visual research methods and pedagogical approaches for visual literacy in education. As visual communication increasingly shapes how knowledge is produced, circulated, and learned, educators and researchers face the challenge of engaging with images not only as teaching aids, but also as objects of inquiry and as modes of thinking and producing knowledge.
Rather than focusing exclusively on the book’s content, this talk examines the intellectual and collaborative labor involved in assembling a multi-author volume in an emerging interdisciplinary field. It discusses the editorial decisions that shaped the conceptual framework of the handbook, the process of curating contributions across diverse methodological traditions, and the strategies used to balance accessibility, critical rigor, and pedagogical relevance.
By sharing insights from this editorial process, the presentation aims to illuminate how academic handbooks function not only as repositories of knowledge, but also as curatorial interventions that help articulate and consolidate developing areas of research and teaching in visual inquiry and visual literacy.
Speakers
avatar for Dana S. Thompson

Dana S. Thompson

Research and Instruction Librarian, Murray State University
Dana S. Thompson is a research and instruction librarian and associate professor at Murray State University. Dana currently serves as the President of the International Visual Literacy Association and has served as a member of the ACRL Visual Literacy Taskforce. Her research and teaching... Read More →
avatar for Ricardo Lopez-Leon

Ricardo Lopez-Leon

Lead Researcher, Universidad Autonoma de Aguascalientes
Gemini dijoRicardo Lopez-Leon is a Lead Researcher-Lecturer at the Design Sciences Center of the University of Aguascalientes, Mexico. He holds a Ph.D. in Art and Sciences for Design, specializing in applied aesthetics and semiotics, from the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana. As... Read More →
Wednesday October 7, 2026 3:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Studio

3:30pm EDT

Shaping Visual Legacies: Memory, Identity, and Institutional Responsibility in Visual Literacy Education
Wednesday October 7, 2026 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
Every time an educator chooses an image, a story, or a text, they are making a decision about memory about what is worth passing forward and to whom. Universities shape those decisions more than they often realize, and the visual legacies they create carry consequences for generations.
This panel brings together scholar-educators from National Louis University's College of Education whose work spans critical visual literacy, Latinx children's literature and religious iconography, cultural memory in picturebooks, healing-centered embodied pedagogy, and primary source inquiry. Together, we ask what it means to teach with and through images that carry cultural, spiritual, historical, and embodied memory and what responsibilities institutions hold in making that teaching visible, sustainable, and enduring.
Rather than arriving at conclusions, this panel opens a conversation. Grounded in the collective work of its presenters, the discussion turns outward. We invite attendees to explore what meaningful, sustainable infrastructure for visual literacy might look like in higher education and across countries. A proposed Visual Literacy Center at National Louis University serves as one generative example: a potential hub connecting teacher education, graduate scholarship, bilingual education, professional development, and community partnerships across borders. We ask the field: what structures and resources would most advance visual literacy research and how do we build them together?
Speakers
DX

Dr. Xiaoning Chen

Associate Professor, ESL/Bilingual Education, National Louis University
Xiaoning Chen, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of ESL/Bilingual Education at National Louis University. Dr. Chen has two decades of experience in language teacher education in the U.S. and internationally. Her research focuses on visual literacy, multicultural children’s literature... Read More →
avatar for Ruth E. Quiroa, Ph.D.

Ruth E. Quiroa, Ph.D.

Associate Professor; M.Ed. Reading Program and EdD. Teaching & Learning Program/Reading, Language, & Literacy Major Director, National Louis University
Ruth E. Quiroa, Ph.D. is an associate professor at National Louis University, teaching graduate youth literature and writing pedagogy, theory, and research courses. A former Spanish/English bilingual teacher (K, 2), her research focuses on the history and visual narratives of Latinx... Read More →
avatar for Dr. Geri Chesner

Dr. Geri Chesner

Professor, Strategic Educational Leadership, National Louis University
Geri has focused on the power of children's literature and visual texts as catalysts for literacy development, with particular emphasis on visual and critical literacy. She serves as a professor at National Louis University in Chicago, IL, and has been an active member of IVLA for... Read More →
avatar for Dr. Karen F. Tardrew

Dr. Karen F. Tardrew

Professor, Chair of Learning Sciences in Education, National Louis University
Dr. Karen F. Tardrew is a tenured Professor and Chair of Learning Sciences in Education at National Louis University, where she has served for over 33 years as a scholar, leader, and innovator in educator development. Her teaching and research explore the intersections of visual... Read More →
Wednesday October 7, 2026 3:30pm - 4:30pm EDT
Studio
 
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