Entries in Arts (24)

Re-Imagine Kenya

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Thursday evening, June 19th, offers a great opportunity to support Kenyan, African, and African-diasporic arts and, at the same time, contribute to the relief effort for the hundreds of thousands who remain internally displaced by the recent political crisis.
The Kenyan artist Wangechi Mutu has been spearheading this new project, and her work, along with many others (Kehinde Wiley, Julie Mehretu, many more) will be auctioned off for charity. The African Medical and Research Foundation has been on the ground in Kenya helping for decades, and is a marvelous organization. Kenya's nobel laureate, Wangari Maathai, is sponsoring the event and will deliver taped greetings from Kenya. And of course, there will be live music, spoken word, photography, and great food and drink.

Tickets can be bought online at http://usa.amref.org or at the door.

Posted on Monday, June 16, 2008 at 04:21PM by Registered CommenterFerentz in , , | CommentsPost a Comment

Creative Slump Opening Reception June 14th

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Posted on Friday, June 6, 2008 at 04:40PM by Registered CommenterFerentz in , , | CommentsPost a Comment

Create Dangerously: The Immigrant Artist at Work

Last night I had the pleasure of attending Edwidge Danticat's presentation at the second annual Toni Morrison Lecture at Princeton University.  The title of Ms. Danticat's presentation was "Create Dangerously: The Immigrant Artist at Work."  Ms. Danticat delivered an exceptional lecture layered with allusiions Albert Camus, Sophocles, and Toni Morrison.  Each allusion, each citiation, each anecdote facilitated a return back to her central theme, the capacity for and necessity of artists to "create dangerously for people who read dangerously."

Ms. Danticat began her talk by referencing Marcel Numa and Louis Drouin two members of Jeune Haiti, thirteen Haitian expatriots who returned to Haiti in 1964 intent on overthrowing then dictator Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier.  Numa and Drouin were publicly executed in Haiti's capital, Port au Prince, as a reminder to others who might be considering forming an insurgency against Duvalier.  In their coverage of this execution for a November 27, 1964 article entitled "A Warning to Renegades" Time Magazine editors invoke language that would have been eerily familiar to an audience familiar with atrocities occuring throughout the American South:

To guarantee an S.R.O crowd for their execution, Duvalier ordered all businesses closed and schools let out; backland peasants were trucked into Port-au-Prince.  As TV cameras recorded the scene, a black and white jeep pulled up to the cemetery, and out stepped the two victims.  They were tied tightly to two pine stakes. 

This "scrupulously respected" traditional proceeding mirrors lynching scenes that scarred this nation for over a century bringing to bear strange fruit on its flora and fauna.  By beginning with this image Danticat brought the listener's attention to what is sometimes at stake for artists creating dangerously in dangerous environments.  Both Numa and Douin were poets, and while it was not their poetry lead to their execution, the knowledge-what we might call consciousness-that these two men developed through reading and writing prompted them to identify this particular quest-overthrowing Duvalier-as their seminal/great work. 

As Ms. Danticat also points out creating dangerously is not simply a life and death matter.  Salvation and myth offered by death avails itself to fewer artists than we imagine, more likely than not creating dangerously requires managing inner personal conflicts and the responsibility of fulfilling one's role as an advocate for others.  In essence, we can concede that each day is not guaranteed therefore with each breathe one risks their lives, but can we take the risk and responsibility of saving someone else's.  Ms. Danticat uses her own attempts at getting her uncle released from the INS detention center in 2004, which she recently chronicled in Brother I'm Dying, as an example of how an artist can find themselves struggling to save the life of another.  Medical doctors are trained knowing that they will not be able to save everyone they set out to help, but artists receive no such training-we speak in hopes that someone will listen and help us fulfill the charge of a particular appeal.

In this vein, Ms. Danticat's quest to save her uncle's life recalls Ida B. Wells' quest to end lynching in the United States.  History compelled these women to write dangerously for people who's lives were in danger.  To that end Danticat's vision of the immigrant artist recalls Wells' crusade as an itinerant journalist in search of justice, and quests udertaken by women such as Athena, Nanny, and Harriet, and as such, these artists who created dangerously for people who lived dangerously, live on in the hearts and minds of their readers. 

 

Posted on Wednesday, March 26, 2008 at 09:45AM by Registered CommenterFerentz in , , , , , | CommentsPost a Comment

Sarang Song

Set in 1972 Los Angeles Tamika Miller's short-film Sarang Song explores a black lesbian couples attempts at managing their love for each other, and their love for justice. Lalana Masters (Simone) and Caryn Ward (Nessa) are student leaders seeking to midwife their campus's march toward having more black faculty members, a black studies department, and less police Picture%201.pngviolence against black students and community members. Along with tending to these missions, Simone and Nessa must also tend to their relationship, an act that at times appears as daunting as their other pursuits.
 

Miller deftly captures the difficulties faced by students coming of age amidst such a turbulent epoch. Her fictional adaptation of UCLA draws on the real life crusade undertaken by black students at this venerable university's in the 60s and 70s. Like many artists who've meditated on this period in time, Miller adapts Angela Davis as her muse, and seemingly limns out this narrative from a variety of visual representations of Davis that have become synonymous with black radicalism in the early 70s. Tn so doing, the Black Panther party's eponymous black leather jackets and berets take a back seat to women and men outfitted in lush earth tones. The lighting weaves back and forth from dusk and dawn, eloquently drawing on California's most profound natural resource, the sun, to relay the urgency and speed of these women's actions, not to mention the cauldron in which they are embedded.

The website does not list any screenings beyond February 2007, but this film is one well worth screening
at colleges and community organizations seeking to further mine stories from "the movement."
Posted on Friday, December 28, 2007 at 11:29AM by Registered CommenterFerentz in , | CommentsPost a Comment

JB and RL Collabo

Check out this recent Hello Babar entry for a writing and photography collaboration by my friends JB and Haitian Rich where JB uses Rich's photographs to complement her interview with the ban Heavy.

Posted on Wednesday, December 19, 2007 at 02:38PM by Registered CommenterFerentz in , , , | CommentsPost a Comment
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