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| Family Trayvon Martin and UK activist Zita Holbourne, photo Barac |
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Video: Parents Trayvon Martin campaigning in London against racial profiling
Friday, May 18, 2012
France appoints three blacks as cabinet Ministers! But it didn't come easy
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| From left to right: Christiane Taubira, George Pau-Langevin, Victorin Lurel |
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Video: Thalles Roberto - "Uma História Escrita Pelo Dedo De Deus"
Thanks to Les 100 mondes de Solange, a video of Thalles Roberto da Silva, the pop rock singer and evangelical pastor from Brazil. The video "Uma História Escrita Pelo Dedo De Deus" ("History Written by the Finger of God") was recorded at the Chevrolet Hall in Belo Horizonte in 2011. What an energy!
Monday, May 14, 2012
NY exhibit | Caribbean: Crossroads of the World
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| Arnaldo Rabell, We Have to Dream in Blue |
Multimedia exhibition to open in three venues the week of June 12, 2012, with subsequent Caribbean events and collaborations around NYC.
The exhibition will examine the visual arts and aesthetic development across the Caribbean, considering the histories of the Spanish, French, Dutch and English islands and their Diasporas. An it will highlight over two centuries of rarely-seen works from the Haitian Revolution (c. 1804) to the present.
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Black French flight attendant forced to hide dreadlocks under a wig
A Black French flight attendant of Air France is not allowed to wear dreadlocks during his service. The Frenchman of Ivorian origin is now forced to wear his dreads under a wig. But the dress code only applies to men, black women are allowed to wear their hair in dreadslocks.
Friday, May 11, 2012
Something you should do… visit Paris (on the cheap)
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| Photo: The Cultural Expose |
NEW: Caribbean Art Magazine - ARC Issue No 5
ARC Magazine announces the release of its 5th volume, which presents a collection of works by contemporary artists practicing in the Caribbean and its diaspora.
Featured artists and writers from Suriname, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, Haiti, Barbados, Martinique, Cuba, Puerto Rico, St. Croix, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Canada, The Netherlands, The UK, The United States, and Venezuela represent and analyze a variety of media, including photography, illustration, film and video, drawing, sculpture, painting, poetry, performance, installation and mixed media.
The 5th issue of ARC brings together a range of artists and writers exploring and experimenting with concepts of Power, Identity, Blackness, Interpretations of Creolization and Belonging.
Featured artists and writers from Suriname, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, Jamaica, Haiti, Barbados, Martinique, Cuba, Puerto Rico, St. Croix, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Canada, The Netherlands, The UK, The United States, and Venezuela represent and analyze a variety of media, including photography, illustration, film and video, drawing, sculpture, painting, poetry, performance, installation and mixed media.
The 5th issue of ARC brings together a range of artists and writers exploring and experimenting with concepts of Power, Identity, Blackness, Interpretations of Creolization and Belonging.
NEW: Transition Magazine 108
Boogie Man, forthcoming, June 2012
In Transition 108, our authors take "the long view from the levee" and survey the muddy flow of African/American history. From the banks of the Mississippi to the back roads of Ivory Coast, manmade dams and barricades block access to our homelands.
But the past has a way of leaking through: West African aesthetic forms in the work of an American sculptor, old soul food joints in the New Newark, the scars of racism in contemporary Cuban art, and the sweet sound of the Gospel Train replaced by Soul Train, a form of secular testifying that taught us to moonwalk down the line.
Check out the table of contents and the interesting links of featured artists at Transition Magazine
In Transition 108, our authors take "the long view from the levee" and survey the muddy flow of African/American history. From the banks of the Mississippi to the back roads of Ivory Coast, manmade dams and barricades block access to our homelands.
But the past has a way of leaking through: West African aesthetic forms in the work of an American sculptor, old soul food joints in the New Newark, the scars of racism in contemporary Cuban art, and the sweet sound of the Gospel Train replaced by Soul Train, a form of secular testifying that taught us to moonwalk down the line.
Check out the table of contents and the interesting links of featured artists at Transition Magazine
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
French city of Nantes opens Memorial to the Abolition of Slavery
The Slavery abolition Memorial in the French city of Nantes opened its doors in March. Nantes was one of France's leading slave ports and it made the city rich. But the city covered up its dark history for decades.
Labels:
Black History,
France
Friday, May 4, 2012
Video: "Toast To Freedom" - Amnesty International's 50th Anniversary
Amnesty International released the video "Toast To Freedom", which is dedicated to human rights activism around the world. Nearly 50 artists contributed to celebrate Amnesty International's 50th Anniversary.
Labels:
Music
Thursday, May 3, 2012
French comedy: “30 degrés couleur” - Rediscovering roots in Martinique
The film 30 degrés couleur of Lucien Jean-Baptiste and Philippe Larue’s is a new French comedy. Set in Martinique, the film follows Patrick (40), played by co-director Jean-Baptiste, as he returns to his birthplace after 30 years in France.
Labels:
Film/Television,
France
Sunday, April 29, 2012
Video: "Margins to Mainstream: The story of Black theatre in Britain" To premiere in May
Via Shadow And Act
Produced by Nu Century Arts, Birmingham, in partnership with the Octavia Foundation, Margins to Mainstream: The Story of Black Theatre in Britain is a groundbreaking film that builds on previous theatre heritage projects delivered by Nu Century Arts, exploring the history and heritage of black theatre in Britain.
Produced by Nu Century Arts, Birmingham, in partnership with the Octavia Foundation, Margins to Mainstream: The Story of Black Theatre in Britain is a groundbreaking film that builds on previous theatre heritage projects delivered by Nu Century Arts, exploring the history and heritage of black theatre in Britain.
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