Showing posts with label Links. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Links. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Links for the Voracious



Source:creativegrowth.org

A fascinating article about the artists and the mission of the Creative Growth Art Center in Oakland. All of the artists are developmentally disabled adults and some of them have become highly collectible artists.

Celebrate the new additions to the periodic table with Tom Lehrer's performance of "The Elements."


Lydia Stuckey remembers traveling with and making dresses for Maya Angelou.

This Leslie Jones profile is a portrait of the artist as a comic heroine.

The rediscovery of master abstract painter Sam Gilliam.

Source:georgetowner.com

"And every one of us has the right to tell our story." Tyler Perry's response to the criticism of his work in New York magazine.

Eva Longoria on returning to prime time TV and living a full life away from celebrity culture.

Ashley C. Ford talks about family, the role of mentors in her professional development and making the choice to be a writer.
Source:huffingtonpost.com











Sunday, September 20, 2015

Links for the Voracious


Death
 


Stacia L. Brown explores the narrow world of the personal essay. Tracy K. Smith shares how prose carries memory in a different manner than poetry. Rachel Kaadzi Ghanash remembers her grandfather and his will to survive in rural Louisiana and Los Angeles. Tyger Williams has written two hit movies in his career, twenty-two years apart. The fallacy of school choice.The band Death is getting immortalized at the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture. If you happen to be in a place where "The Golden Girls" isn't playing three hours a day on basic cable, treat yourself to some quotes and dialogue from Dorothy, Blanche, Rose and Sophia. Listen to Tony Geary talk about his career as Luke Spencer, the first anti-hero on daytime television.

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Links for the Voracious

 
 
Source: commons.wikimedia.org
 
 
Bengali intellectual M.N. Roy's philosophy of Radical Humanism and his vision for an anti-colonial utopia in Mexico City. English has changed dramatically over the last five hundred years. Documenting the fall and rebirth of the National Natural History Museum in Paris.
 
 
Source: irishtimes.com
 
 
The scientific discovery which shuffles the deck of human history. The practice of photographing enslaved African women in Brazil in the late 1880's. Joan Acocella on Elmore Leonard. The American Dream plays favorites. 
 
 
Harriet by Elizabeth Catlett
Source: elizabethcatlett.org


Sunday, September 6, 2015

Links for the Voracious


Source: ebony.com
 
 
Grace Jones through the lens of Queer history.
 
 
Evelyn C. White offers insight into the pioneering career of Althea Gibson, the first black tennis icon. Ms. Gibson is the subject of the latest PBS American Masters documentary.
 

 
Octavia Butler's "Dawn" is in development for TV.
 
The heroine's journey cannot be told with a single story. SuperSelected has put together a list of 10 movies about young black women on the cusp of adulthood. H/T poc-creators.tumblr.com
 
Mae Jemison shares her thoughts on determination, resilience and focus.
Source: wikimedia.org


Some of the most whimsical and intricate hair and nail art was on display at the Bronner Bros. International Beauty Show in August. NYmag.com produced a slideshow of the artistry.
Source: newpittsburghcourieronline.com

 
 
 
 
 
 



Sunday, July 19, 2015

Links for the voracious



Mounia, Yves Saint Laurent, and Iman


Naomi Campbell continues her fight against racism in the fashion industry.

Shani O. Hilton on Ta-Nehisi Coates' new book "Between The World and Me."

What is Black Twitter?

 Zeba Blay on the madness behind the media's vitriolic attacks on six-time Wimbledon champion Serena Williams.

Legendary jewel thief Doris Payne is spending her golden years robbing jewelry stores.

Source: The Washington Post
 
 
Watch the trailer of "The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne."

 
 

Friday, July 10, 2015

Links for the voracious


A skosh of the tantalizing tidbits online.

Ruby Dee and Nat King Cole
Source: LA Times



Shernold Edwards ("Sleepy Hollow," "Haven"), Courtney Kemp Agboh ("Power," "The Good Wife") and Robin Thede ("The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore") on their careers in television.

Practical life advice from Tracee Ellis Ross.

Adventures in pizza delivery.

The Dissolve has closed up shop. 

Marie Curie's home and its contents will be radioactive for at least 1,500 years.

 
Marie Curie, Source: mentalfloss.com

Monday, May 18, 2015

Links for the voracious

Just a skosh of the tantalizing tidbits online.


 
"I think the Battle of Versailles captured the sense of transformation that was such a part of the 1970s. Each of the American designers, in their own way, reflected change. Anne Klein captured the new feminism. Halston was part of the rise of celebrity culture. Bill Blass and Oscar de la Renta both were examples of the distance that American designers and the American fashion industry had come. Stephen Burrows spoke to the social liberation. And certainly the black models—and their impact on the show and influence on the other models—captured the tumultuous racial climate."- Robin Givhan, author of The Battle of Versailles."


 
"By the early ’70s, she was making 15-foot-tall “very hairy and fetishy” charcoal hybrids of penises and screws, a play on “screwing,” as in fornication, and “getting screwed,” as in being mistreated. “The idea is funny, but the execution was very raw,” she says. “They were very warlike and missilelike and ominous.”


 
"If you read anything about Susan Sontag written since her death in 2004, it won’t take long for you to stumble across the fact that she could be, as Terry Castle puts it in her agonizingly generous essay "Desperately Seeking Susan," "weally  weally mean!" Sontag’s arrogance, her condescension, her inhospitality — often, the earlier and more prominently these ad feminam excoriations figure in the review at hand, the less earnest the engagement with her work that follows. (One can’t help but notice that the niceness of her male peers is rarely considered so central to their legacy; the press hath no scorn like for a woman-fury.) Eventually, this preoccupation becomes more than a distraction — it becomes a crutch to excuse shallow inquiry into her work. That is not the problem with Daniel Schreiber’s Susan Sontag, first published in German and translated by David Dollenmayer, the first biography published since her death. It offers an opportunity to reassess how we approach the last great public intellectual."
 

 
"With the release "The Thrill is Gone" (1969), B.B. King solidified his role as Black music's ambassador to the world. Throughout the 1970s King also found crossover success with singles like "Ain't Nobody Home" (1972) and "To Know You Is To Love You" (1973), which was written and originally recorded by Stevie Wonderand Syretta Wright; Wonder appears on the King version, effectively capturing two generations of black music listeners, at a moment when Wonder was ascending to his own iconic status. By the time King released 1974's Friends, with the title track and the instrumental "Philadelphia," which sounds like the best of what was produced at Sigma Sound Studios in that era, the mainstream pop audiences were gone, looking more for nostalgia from the Claptons and Steve Millers of the world than forward thinking from "old" Blues musicians."
 
 
 
“We’re constantly being bombarded with the same image of black people, over and over again—the same tropes played out again and again in media and in movies and in journalism and popular culture. So to see something that is contrary to the dominant narrative is so refreshing,” says Shantrelle P. Lewis, the curator of “Dandy Lion” who began documenting the black dandy in 2010. “When [black men] walk inside this exhibition, they see themselves reflected on the wall, and it’s a very powerful thing.”
 

 
 
 
"Librarians have frequently been involved in the fight against government surveillance. The first librarian to be locked up for defending privacy and intellectual freedom was Zoia Horn, who spent three week in jail in 1972 for refusing to testify against anti–Vietnam War activists. During the Cold War, librarians exposed the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s attempts to recruit library staffers to spy on foreigners, particularly Soviets, through a national effort called the Library Awareness Program."

 

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Links for the voracious


Source: Awesome People Reading
 
I like to share a skosh of all the old and new tidbits I find online.


Arthur the dog's arduous trek through the Amazon rainforest and his new life in Sweden.


Creating art from the detritus of everyday life. 
 
Music librarians reveal the history of Mozart's Seranata by analyzing just one page of the composition.
 
Watch master book restorer Nobuo Okano transform a beloved well-worn book.

Three teenage sisters and a love for hard rock music. The Warning is my new favorite  band.
 

 

 
 
 
 


Monday, April 6, 2015

Links for the voracious


Medievalist Dorothy Kim brings librarian and archivist Belle da Costa Greene's name back into the public consciousness. Thanks to People of Color in European Art History for posting Kim's tweets.

Hen? Sweden makes the move to make language more inclusive and dynamic.

The future is coming and you will not be here.
 
If you are looking for something to read, browse the titles of the best sellers of the 20th century.
 
Misquoting Aristotle about excellence.
 
The way Marshall McLuhan read.
 
 
 

 

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Links for the Voracious



Ava Duvernay on Selma and her approach to storytelling.


 
Wigs, high heels and punk rock. That’s Pure Hell.

 

The law of unintended consequences playing out on the streets of New York.

 

Poet Claudia Rankine delves into the complexities of citizenship.



The Wire and the art of sound editing.



Ayn Rand at the movies.