http://weblog.liberatormagazine.com/2012/01/africa-in-european-imagination-is.html
* Drawing by Grafilu
Eyes on the World; A Blog about Ideas and the Arts------- *Viewing on your phone? Tap ‘View Web Version’ below for full layout and features.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Danny Glover on Art and Activism
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Photograph by Scott Langley Click Link: http://vimeo.com/43857612 |
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Transition-Zina Saro-Wiwa
I am fast becoming a fan of the work and insight of Zina Saro-Wiwa. Her father would be so proud!
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The art: Hank Willis Thomas, Who Can Say No to a Gorgeous Brunette?, 2007. |
Here she presents an Op-Doc on black women’s decision to embrace their naturally kinky hair, rather than use chemical straighteners.
Click the link to view :
This is my Africa by Zina Saro-Wiwa
TheT film features: contemporary artist Yinka Shonibare MBE; actor Colin Firth; filmmaker John Akomfrah OBE; Channel 4 news anchor Jon Snow; actor Chiwetel Ejiofor; singer Mpho Skeef; author Biyi Bandele; travel writer Noo Saro-Wiwa; opera singer Josephine Amankwah; fashion designer Bayo Oduwole; playwright Dipo Agboluaje; writer Mazzi Binaisa; DJ Duncan Brooker; politician and lawyer Paul Boateng; restaurateur Mourad Mazouz; actress and film-maker Lupita Nyong'o; writer and curator Nana O. Ayim; magazine publishers Njide and Nneka Ugboma; DJ/Producer Tony Nwachukwu and contemporary artist Mustafa Maluka.
Join the This Is My Africa
page!
Join the This Is My Africa

Friday, June 1, 2012
Sojourner Ahebee; Awarded National Gold Medal for Poetry by the Alliance for Young Artists & Writers
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Here's Sojourner enjoying the work of her peers. She also received a 2012 gold medal for her poetry. |
Art.Write.Now.2012 National Exhibition features the top award-winning art and writing from teens across the United States, identified through the prestigious Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. This year’s judges include David Sedaris, Roz Chast, Michael Bierut, Edwidge Danticat, and Mary Ellen Mark. The exhibition showcases 500 visual and literary wo...rks from students in grades 7 through 12. On display will be film, animation, 2D and 3D artworks, e-readers, videogames and video greetings from the students, which together create a dynamic and interactive look at the 89th year of this renowned exhibition.
These creative teens follow in the footsteps of past winners including Andy Warhol, John Baldessari, Sylvia Plath, Truman Capote, Richard Avedon, Edward Sorel, Robert Redford, Zac Posen, Joyce Carol Oates, Ken Burns and many more. Visit the exhibition to view work from the nation’s most talented emerging artists and writers.
Sheila C. Johnson Design Center at Parsons New School of Design
66 Fifth Avenue @ 13th Street
2 West 13th Street at Fifth Avenue
Hours
Daily 12 noon - 6:00 p.m.
Open late Thursdays until 8:00 p.m.
Exhibition Dates
Open to public June 1 - June 16
These creative teens follow in the footsteps of past winners including Andy Warhol, John Baldessari, Sylvia Plath, Truman Capote, Richard Avedon, Edward Sorel, Robert Redford, Zac Posen, Joyce Carol Oates, Ken Burns and many more. Visit the exhibition to view work from the nation’s most talented emerging artists and writers.
Sheila C. Johnson Design Center at Parsons New School of Design
66 Fifth Avenue @ 13th Street
2 West 13th Street at Fifth Avenue
Hours
Daily 12 noon - 6:00 p.m.
Open late Thursdays until 8:00 p.m.
Exhibition Dates
Open to public June 1 - June 16
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
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AP Photo/Phil Coale |
Old Pictures and Black Walls
By Octavia McBride-Ahebee *1985
Old pictures whisper through cracked
and faded ink,
through haze and lack of photographers’ skill
of the lazy eye you carried,
cold and clear and lonely
-like a child’s abandoned marble upon
a face a blade had no need to tread.
It is the cherry blossom season,
the sun is standing high and hot,
the heat and fragrance rub against the other
trying to fool me into feeling
that the simple swinging scent
of a cherry blossom in flight
wrapped in the warmth of a benign ray
can forgive all that is ugly with its sweet self.
To think that we are same in age
you in death and me in life
with flat stomachs as hard as the head of a hammer,
with corned-covered feet as long and as well traveled
as Broad Street,
with fears as big and heavy as an African elephant
inspires simple yet frenzied fantasies
like me cupping in the palm of my hand
just for the hell of it
your high Cherokee cheekbone
or pressing my parted lips against it
and saying good day Daddy.
But I stand firm and full of fury
like the sun
before this great black wailing wall,
then I see the name that numbs me
-yours-
I walk my knuckle in the
carved crevice of your name
thinking who but a generous mother
of yesteryear
would give such a gift as your name.
I took my thoughts and inhaled them
along with the scent of cherry blossoms and the heat.
Monday, May 28, 2012
The Old Lie: Dulce et Decorum Est. Pro patria mori.
... "The US military loses more soldiers to suicide than to combat. The unemployment rate of young veterans is twice that of their peers who don't enlist. One in three women in the US military is sexually assaulted. Domestic violence in military families is triple the civilian rate. Over 25,000 military families qualify for food stamps. The Pentagon spends over $4 billion a year on recruitment."
This morning I also helped my dad, a war-veteran, unfold his flag and display it on our porch. And I think , especially today, of the boys I loved who have been utterly destroyed by war as have those who attempt to help heal their wounds. I think, too, of the last lines of a Wilfred Owen poem which states:
"The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est. Pro patria mori."
http://1800recycling.com/2011/07/iconic-depictions-recycling-human-suffering-camouflage-gear/
Friday, May 25, 2012
APIARY Magazine- Issue 4- Give A Listen
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*Drawing by robert tres trujillo- http://investigateconversateillustrate.blogspot.com/ |
Here are some writers reading from their work which will appear in the upcoming issue of APIARY. I'm included.
APIARY is an all-Philly literary magazine showcasing the brilliance and variety of local writing. For the rest of these and many more stories, pick up a copy of Issue 4, arriving on June 1 at Underground Arts,
1200 Callowhill St .
1200 Callowhill St
Saturday, May 19, 2012
A Vision in Sound; Tosca in Rehearsal: Shirley Verrett and Luciano Pavarotti
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Drawing by Callie Floor |
Small press publishers are getting quite inventive in how they explore and execute new formats for sharing the work of artists. Case in point is Kindling, a literary journal which publishes its issues on a series of 20 4X6 cards contained in an envelope which carries the table of contents on its cover. I have a 250-word short story in the current issue of Kindling, #5, about an African-American boy who cares for his opera-singing, mentally unstable mother with the help of a retired tuxedo maker from Milano.
Check out this pocket lit and subscribe to Kindling- http://www.gatherkindling.com/
When I was a young girl, my dad was a huge fan of the opera singers Grace Bumbry and Shirley Verrett. Here is Ms. Verrett rehearsing with Luciano Pavarotti for a performance of Tosca. This is a gem ! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WhGtqDa_L38
Monday, May 7, 2012
Poet Joshua Clover and 11 Students May Face Prison Time and $1 Million in Damages for Shutdown of US Bank
* Source-Poetry Foundations' Harriet
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Poet Joshua Clover |
If you haven’t heard: The administration of UC Davis is holding poet and professor Joshua Clover and 11 students accountable for their alleged role in protests that led to the shutdown of a campus US Bank. “District Attorney Jeff Reisig is charging campus protesters with 20 counts each of obstructing movement in a public place, and one count of conspiracy. If convicted, the protesters could face up to 11 years each in prison, and $1 million in damages.” According to the Davis Dozen press release:
The charges were brought at the request of the UC Davis administration, which had recently received a termination letter from US Bank holding the university responsible for all costs, claiming they were “constructively evicted” because the university had not responded by arresting the “illegal gathering.” Protesters point out that the charges against them serve to position the university favorably in a potential litigation with US Bank.
From Alternet:
[I]t seems that the University administration has successfully evaded scrutiny of the role it played in a series of events that began in January at UC Davis when 12 protesters, some of whom had been pepper-sprayed in November, staged another peaceful sit-in at the campus branch of US Bank. The sit-in was an important political action in defense of public funding of the University and against the replacement of that funding by private contracts with corporations. The protestors won an enormous victory when US Bank closed it University branch on February 28, possibly breaking its agreement with UC Davis…
The protestors’ success in this fight against the privatization agenda of the University should be cause for celebration; however, on March 29, nearly a month after the bank pulled out of UC Davis, the 11 students and 1 professor involved in the sit-in received orders to appear at Yolo County Superior Court…
Unfortunately, this time around there is no graphic youtube video that could potentially go viral and capture the psychological and financial stress the protesters are under as they face the possibility of having to leave school and, even worse, say goodbye to friends, family, partners and children as they go off to serve time in the California penal system. There is no video to elicit gasps of horror at the threat of a lifetime of financial ruin that the protesters face. There is no video to show the unremitting repression of their democratic right to freedom of assembly and political protest.
A petition is circulating that demands UC Davis drop all charges. A fellow Davis student, Mela Heestand, writes:
The pepper spraying of UC Davis students shocked the nation, but the persecution that the Davis Dozen protesters face is far worse. It is life-altering for them. We cannot allow the story of the Davis Dozen to fall through the cracks, even though it might not strike a chord as immediately visceral as the now infamous video of Lieutenant Pike attacking students with a chemical agent. Let us reflect on the tragic irony that the state funding that should be allocated to aiding the intellectual growth and development of the 11 students involved in the sit-in might be funneled towards their incarceration. The modest salary that is paid to a professor, committed enough to advocate for public education might be replaced by state money to keep this highly gifted professional locked up.
And indeed, if we look at where the state money paid by the people of California for services to foster the common good, we can plainly see that this scenario is a sinister microcosm. In 2011, the UC and CSU systems account for $5.6 billion of state funding, while the prisons are receiving $9.6 billion dollars from the state. The state spends about $50,000 per inmate each year. We cannot look the other way and allow the boot of the penal system to fall on these protesters, while corrupt University administrators secure the way to enrich the 1% on California’s dime with impunity and at the expense of public education. We must immediately demand that all charges be dropped against the Davis Dozen.
Their arraignment originally set for April 27th has been postponed until May 10th, according to the California Aggie. You can also find out more on the Davis Dozen website. Read the FAQs about the case here. And more as we know!
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