Washington DC MOI MOI WEST AFRICAN RESTAURANT

Washington DC BBR) A New Concept by Chef Howsoon Cham. 
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Originally from The Gambia, West Africa, chef Howsoon Cham began cutting his teeth early in the high-end restaurant scene. Eventually, he went on to own several restaurants in the D.C. area. With a keen eye for details, he realized there is a lack of American food with an West African flare in D.C. 
 
So he decided to launch Moi Moi to showcase a different concept of cooking and serving the food he grew up eating. Moi Moi derives it's name from a very popular street food all over West Africa. 
 
 
 
At Moi Moi restaurant, staples like the Jollof rice with the Whole  Red Snapper, Okra Stew with fufu, Gari Crusted Catfish or the Lamb chops with cassava mint leaf pesto are a must try.. Do check out the homemade desserts and ice cream as well, they are all made in-house.
Make a reservation at Moi Moi DC, 1627 K Street NW, Washington DC 20006
 
Instagram: moimoi_dc
Telephone:202-303-0125
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“Break records at Louis, ate breakfast at Gucci, My girl a superstar all from a home movie. Bow on our arrival, the un-American idols, What niggas did in Paris, got 'em hangin' off the Eiffel” -Kanye West, Clique

Washington, DC (BBR) - Time will tell if Kanye West’s White House bid is an earnest effort to assume the presidency or a publicity stunt to fuel future record sales. Regardless, his candidacy lacks national viability and it is doubtful he would attract enough votes to effectively sway the outcome on Election Day. However, Candidate Kanye’s theatrics run the risk of diminishing, and at worst, making light of the myriad issues roiling America today.

Ever since stepping on the scene with the 2004 release of his debut album, College Dropout, Kanye West has offered a searing critique of the altars of consumerism and entertainment where Americans worship artfully blending humor, theology, sexuality, eroticism, social justice, and politics. West, throughout his career, has held a mirror up to society, the culture, and himself in ways that has allowed me to look past some of his most outlandish antics. Why? Because I’ve seen through the veil of the theater and his perpetual “wardrobe changes” for what they are—naked attempts to keep the congregation (ahem) audience engaged.

One of my favorite Kanye tracks is “I Love Kanye” from his seventh album Life of Pablo, where he essentially tells his audience that the person we all fell in love with was really just a character he was developing, which is constantly being refined. Surprise! The joke’s on you.

Kanye Omari West is to Kanye West what Rudy Ray Moore is to Dolemite.

Before cloaking himself as presidential candidate, West’s previous wardrobe change was to eschew making secular and profane music, in favor of tunes that are spiritually inspired. Throughout his career, West has always engaged in God talk (praise, worship, and lament) explicitly and through innuendo. Even in some of his most vulgar lyrics, expressions of his faith can be found.

But at the same time, West was also aware that he stood on an altar and was the subject of adoration.

“When a nigga blowup they gonna build statues for me,” he raps on the all-star track “Forever” which features Drake, Lil Wayne, and Eminem. While West’s verse begins with bravado it ends with him mourning the recent death of his mother and shallowness of the fame he initially craved. “Chasing the stardom would turn you into a maniac, All the way in Hollywood and I can’t even act, They pull their cameras out and God damn they snap, I used to want this thing forever y'all can have it back.”

However, rather than retreat from the spotlight his antics would reach even greater heights, including memorably snatching the microphone away from Taylor Swift at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards. His next album, arguably his magnum opus, was released with a 35-minute short film. The movie is about a Phoenix who falls to earth and becomes West’s girlfriend but has to eventually leave him to return to the celestial and heavenly world from which she came.

In subsequent years, West would go on to release albums and songs with titles like “Watch The Throne,” “Who Gon Stop Me,” “Yeezus,” “I am A God,” “Ultralight Beam,” and now “Jesus is King.”

It seems that West has also concluded that religion and popular culture have a lot in common. Indeed, for the past year or so, West has been holding revival style concerts called “Sunday Service.” They started as small invite-only sessions that centered around a gospel choir and testimonies from West’s celebrity friends. Then this summer at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, West held a sunrise Sunday Service atop a mound while dressed in a flowing tunic.

Isaac Hayes was Black Moses, now Kanye West is Black Jesus.

While not billed as a tour, West has taken Sunday Service on the road, including performing on the campus of Howard University during homecoming and at churches in Atlanta and Los Angeles.

It seems West has answered the question he posed back in 2010 through the song “Gorgeous”: “Is hip hop just a euphemism for a new religion? The soul music for the slaves that the youth is missing.”

However, I am critical of what West is offering in his latest manifestation. Beyond the recent embrace of right-wing political ideology, what is more troubling is that he is calling people to the altar to worship without any sacrifice. I find it deeply troubling that the white evangelical Protestants who backed George W. Bush—a man West famously declared didn’t “care about Black people” on live television—are now praising his music through various media platforms.

I don’t know if West, the faith leaders, and universities that have hosted him are making a mockery out of religion. But I believe that faith and worship should be tied to earthly and spiritual transformation. So, if religion ain’t revolution, then you are just getting high.

BBR ( Los Angeles)  - 2020 It has been confirmed by multiple outlets that 2017 Oscar winner and NBA legend Kobe Bryant has died at the age of 41 following a helicopter crash in Calabasas, California. Bryant is reportedly one of a group of at least five people who died during a Sunday morning helicopter flight.

Initially reported by TMZ Sports (and soon corroborated by the Los Angeles TimesThe Hollywood Reporter, and other outlets), Bryant was on board a private helicopter with at least five other people on Sunday morning. It is believed, per TMZ, that a fire broke out on the helicopter which caused it to crash in Calabasas. TMZ also reported that eyewitnesses allegedly heard the helicopter’s engine sputtering before it eventually crashed. Even with these details, officials are still investigating to determine the true cause of the crash. It is unconfirmed at this time who else was on board the helicopter. Bryant’s wife, Vanessa Bryant, was not on board.

Bryant leaves behind a towering legacy primarily thanks to his 20-plus year career playing for the NBA team the Los Angeles Lakers. He was a five-time NBA champion and 18-time All-Star selection. As far as his time with the Lakers is concerned, Bryant racked up many superlatives, including leader in points (33,643), steals (1,944),  3-pointers (1,827), free throws (8,378), and games played (1,346). Until Saturday, January 24, Bryant was the number 3 scorer in NBA history before LeBron James overtook him and secured that spot over the weekend. He was also voted the NBA’s Most Valuable Player in 2008. He retired from the NBA in 2016. Following his retirement, Bryant won an Oscar in 2018 for Best Animated Short for his autobiographical Dear Basketball.

Daniel Kaluuya in “Get Out,” which announced its writer-director, Jordan Peele, as a major new filmmaker.Credit...Justin Lubin/Universal Pictures

As we come to the end of 2019, there are many lists being made about the best or most important movies of the 2010s. But I am not seeing a focus on movies by black filmmakers about black lives.

A few critics’ lists have included “Moonlight” or “Get Out,” but they have left off the vast majority of black films with impact. I’d argue that the 2010s were the most important decade for black film in America. We see dramas (“12 Years a Slave”), comedies (“Girls Trip”), horror (“Get Out,” “Us”) and documentaries (“13TH” and “O.J.: Made in America”) all being taken seriously critically, and most were successful financially.

So, the question I’d like to consider is a rather simple one: What were the best black films of the past decade? Here are my answers, in alphabetical order:

‘Black Panther’

 

The cultural impact of Marvel’s 2018 trip to Wakanda (directed by Ryan Coogler) cannot be overstated. Black moviegoers wore the best African attire they could find to the theater. Events weuilt around the showings, complete with face painting and African dance contests. What surprised me was that the film was actually good, and, boldly, it featured few white people. That did not stop the masses from making it one of Marvel’s most successful films both critically and financially.

‘Creed’

The director Ryan Coogler took an essentially dead franchise centered on a white man (“Rocky”), and turned it into an existential examination of black masculinity in the wake of industrial decline. The black residents of Philadelphia are as much a character in this 2015 movie as is Michael B. Jordan’s Creed. And while it gives you the predictable chills of every “Rocky” movie ever made, it does so with an unapologetic eye for the way black heroes carry not only their hopes and dreams, but also the dreams of the community they represent.

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‘Get Out’

This 2017 horror parable is well written and directed by Jordan Peele, announcing the emergence of a major filmmaker. The subtle choices mark this as arguably the film of the decade. The fact that Peele chooses to tell a story in which all the white people are villainous forced us to come to terms with the pervasive racism in seemingly liberal communities in the North, instead of focusing on the racism in the South. The way ideas like the Sunken Place have entered the American lexicon is a testament to the powerful storytelling and imagery. This was not just a great film, but a groundbreaking one.

‘Girls Trip’

This was the movie that made Tiffany Haddish a star. In this 2017 comedy from Malcolm D. Lee, Haddish, like Melissa McCarthy in “Bridesmaids,” forced the world to make way for her infectious, if at times annoying, brand of comedy. She steals every scene she is in, but in a way that complements her co-stars instead of taking away from their performances. But it is the story that makes this more than just another raunchy comedy. Yes, there are many funny set pieces, but everything that happens is authentically grounded in the character’s choices, elevating the material. This was a huge commercial and critical success, proving that white and black audiences will turn out to watch comedies about black lives.

‘Moonlight’

What else can be said about Barry Jenkins’s breakout drama from 2016? It is a sensitive, deliberate examination of what it means to be a black, queer boy born into a world that accepts neither you nor the people you love. It is exquisitely shot and superbly acted (with Mahershala Ali and Trevante Rhodes giving standout performances). But what we most remember about this film is the way “La La Land” was mistakenly announced as best picture when, in reality, “Moonlight” had won. For once the Oscars actually recognized the best film of the year.

‘O.J.: Made In America’

Its seven-hour-plus run time (and the decision to follow its theatrical run with a multipart broadcast on television) led to debates about what constitutes a film. But the narrative thrust and momentum of this 2016 documentary about the former N.F.L. star O.J. Simpson and the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald L. Goldman point to its being worthy of this list. The depth of the athlete’s racial delusion remains dizzying (“I’m not black; I’m O.J.,” he once said), but what Ezra Edelman’s film does best is to show how America’s response to his 1995 trial uncovered a deep racial and cultural divide in our country — a divide that was made apparent when the jury made the unwise decision to find him not guilty.

‘Selma’

This is not a perfect movie, but it is an important one. It took decades to get a major motion picture about the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. off the ground, and while this 2014 drama plays a little too fast and loose with the history surrounding President Lyndon B. Johnson for my taste, the way it depicts King, his inner circle and the black people he came into contact with was spot on. What’s more, the director Ava DuVernay’s decision to include discussions about King’s infidelity was an act of courage, the choice of a new filmmaker with bold ideas.

‘Sorry to Bother You’

This 2018 satire written and directed by Boots Riley isn’t for everyone. It’s quirky. Its humor is offbeat. It plays with magical realism without fully committing to the logic of that kind of storytelling. In this tale of a telemarketer’s rise thanks to his “white voice,” humans turn into “equisapiens,” and that narrative stretch makes sense within the story. This is a bebop jazz film that feels as if Riley made it while in an ecstatic religious state. It is also a brilliant, piercing examination of the way capitalism forces black Americans to choose between being their authentic selves and the people that corporate America wants them to be. And it has one of the best examples of code switching I’ve ever seen captured onscreen. I found this film abrasive when I first saw it, but with repeat viewings, its stature has grown in my eyes.

‘Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse’

I’ve had my quibbles, but I cannot deny the impact this 2018 movie had on young black boys like my son. They were able to see a superhero movie that centered on a person who not only looked like them, but who was navigating a white world in a body that is looked on with suspicion. Watching the film (directed by Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey and Rodney Rothman)is the closest moviegoing experience to actually reading a comic, and the visuals are jaw-dropping.

‘12 Years a Slave’

I hesitated to include this 2013 drama, directed by Steve McQueen and adapted from the memoirs of Solomon Northup, an African-American freeman enslaved and sent to the South. About three-fourths of the way into the film, Solomon has a fateful discussion with a white laborer, Bass, played by Brad Pitt. Bass agrees to mail a letter for Solomon explaining the chain of events that led to his being freed, thus making Bass the standard white savior. But McQueen crams beauty into every place he can, including that of the American South. And yet he unflinchingly depicts the abuse suffered by enslaved black people in an unsentimental way. To my mind, this is the definitive film about slavery, and the Oscar-winning performance by Lupita Nyong’o as the enslaved mistress Patsey is as heartbreaking as it is memorable.

Chicago (BBR) Following The Last Dance, several of Michael Jordan's teammates were rumored—or confirmed—to have been upset with His Airness—including his capo, Scottie Pippen. During a conversation with the Associated Press, Pippen touched on these reports and his relationship with MJ. 

"Why would I be offended by anything that happened 30 years ago?" Pippen said in a piece published on Tuesday.

 

After the Emmy-nominated docu-series aired, sources started to claim that Pippen was "beyond livid" with the way he was portrayed in the documentary and blamed that depiction on Jordan. The Last Dance touched on the highs and lows of the Bulls dynasty. This included Scottie Pippen's contract woes and infamous moments like "The Migraine Game" in 1990 and when Scottie refused to finish out a game during the 1994 playoffs. 

"It didn’t bother me at all," Pippen continued. "It was an opportunity for our younger generation that hadn’t seen or knew anything about basketball in the ‘90s."

Yet there were some players who did take opposition to Jordan's account of events like Horace Grant. During the documentary, Jordan bluntly labeled Grant as the snitch who leaked information to Sam Smith for the Jordan Rules book. Grant responded by calling Jordan a "liar" before claiming that he's ready to "settle this like men."

"Lie, lie, lie. ... If MJ had a grudge with me, let's settle this like men," Grant said in May. "Let's talk about it. Or we can settle it another way. But yet and still, he goes out and puts this lie out that I was the source behind [the book]. ... It's only a grudge, man. I'm telling you, it was only a grudge. And I think he proved that during this so-called documentary. When if you say something about him, he's going to cut you off, he's going to try to destroy your character."

Jada Pinkett Smith’s social media show “Red Table Talk” just got renewed, and spawned a spinoff.

What happened: Facebook Watch has renewed “Red Table Talk” for a multiyear deal for three years, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

  • The show will run through 2022, per Deadline.
  • It will include Pinkett Smith, Willow Smith and Adrienne Banfield Norris.
  • Facebook Watch also added a new spinoff show called “Red Table Talk: The Estefans,” which will be hosted by Gloria Estefan along with her daughter Emily, and her niece Lili.

What they’re saying: Mina Lefevre, head of development and programming at Facebook Watch, cheered the move, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

  • Lefevre: “We’ve been fortunate enough to be in business with such wonderful partners and are thrilled to expand the ‘Red TableTalk’ franchise with Jada Pinkett Smith, the Estefans and Westbrook Studios. ‘Red Table Talk’ is a shining example of how content, community and conversation come together on Facebook Watch. We’re proud to keep this conversation going around topics our fans care about.”
  • Pinkett Smith: ”I’m incredibly proud of ‘Red Table Talk,’ and thrilled to build upon this franchise with my family and with Gloria, Emily and Lili. ‘Red Table Talk’ has created a space to have open, honest and healing conversations around social and topical issues, and what’s most powerful for me is hearing people’s stories and engaging with our fans in such a tangible way on the Facebook Watch platform. I’m excited to see the Estefans put their spin on the franchise and take it to new places.”

2019 headlines: “Red Table Talk” made headlines multiple times in 2019. Here are a few of the reports on those headlines.

NEWS

A new report requested by French President Emmanuel Macron outlines proposals for repatriating African cultural objects. The report by scholars Bénédicte Savoy of France and Felwine Sarr of Senegal, recommends “that objects that were removed and sent to mainland France without the consent of their countries of origin be permanently returned—if the country of origin asks for them.”

Grenada has selected four artists to represent the nation in its third appearance at the Venice Biennale next year. Based on the theme, “Epic Memory,” Grenada plans an exhibition inspired by Derek Walcott’s 1992 acceptance speech for the Nobel prize in literature. The Caribbean nation is not providing funds to foot the bill for its pavilion, however. In response, one of the artists, Billy Gerard Frank, is crowd-sourcing his budget.

Time magazine’s Nov. 15 cover asks “Who Gets to be American?” and features a recreation of Norman Rockwell’s Freedom to Worship image from his 1943 “Four Freedoms” series. The cover image by Hank Willis Thomas and Emily Shur is part of Thomas’s For Freedoms project and accompanies several articles about immigration and U.S. border policy, including “I Love America. That’s Why I Have to Tell the Truth About It,” a cover essay by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Viet Thanh Nyugenk, who writes about his experiences as a refugee. READ MORE about the cover image.

According to artnet News, Bill Cosby, who was sentenced to three to 10 years in state prison for aggravated indecent assault in September, is levering two multimillion dollar Thomas Hart Benton paintings to raise capital. The Cosbys assembled an impressive collection over the decades primarily focused on African American artists that is documented in the book “The Other Side of Color: African American Art in the Collection of Camille O. and William H. Cosby, Jr.,” and was showcased at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art from 2014-2016 in the exhibition “Conversations,” which opened just as dozens of sexual misconduct accusations against Cosby were coming to light.

In 1982, the Metropolitan Museum of Art opened a wing devoted to art from Africa, Oceania, and the Americas. After nearly 40 years, the New York City museum announced it plans to renovate the galleries, spending $70 million. Designed by Kulapat Yantrasast of wHY Architecture, the project is expected to begin in 2020 and be completed in 2023.

Accused of censorship, the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities backtracked on recently added grant language requiring recipients to refrain from producing work that could be considered lewd, offensive, or political or risk forfeiting their grant funds.

 


From left, Sharon Holm is joining the Pérez Art Museum Miami | Photo courtesy PAMM; Marc Bamuthi Joseph has been hired by the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts | Photo by Bethanie Hines

 
APPOINTMENTS

Marc Bamuthi Joseph has been named vice president and artistic director of social impact at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. He is charged with expanding the Kennedy Center’s audience and increasing its footprint in the community. Described as “a seasoned administrator and a highly acclaimed practicing artist,” Joseph is a dancer by training who has created a wide-range of performance pieces, from spoken word and Hip Hop to theater, opera, and multimedia. He previously served as chief of program and pedagogy at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco.

Sharon Holm joined the Pérez Art Museum Miami as deputy director of marketing and public engagement. Most recently, she served as vice president of marketing and communications at the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art in Charlotte, N.C.

Spelman College in Atlanta announced the appointment of Will Power as a distinguished professor in the Department of Theatre & Performance. An award-winning playwright, performer and co-creator of hip hop theater, Power is considered “an innovator and dramatic explorer of new theatrical forms.” The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Playwright in Residence with the Dallas Theater Center, he comes to Spelman from Southern Methodist University.

Kristine E. Guillaume, 20, was elected president of The Harvard Crimson, becoming the first black woman (and third black person ever) to lead the Harvard University newspaper in its 146-year history. A member of the Class of 2020, Guillaume is a joint major in African American studies and history and literature.

Stephen Kasher, whose eponymous Chelsea gallery focuses on photography, is closing up shop and joining David Zwirner Gallery as a director. Kasher’s roster of three-dozen photographers includes Jules Allen, Teju Cole, Louis Draper, Leonard Freed, Charles Moore, Ruddy Roye, Stephen Shames, Ming Smith, and Pete Souza.

 


Kapwani Kiwanga won Canada’s 2018 Sobey Art Award. | Courtesy of National Gallery of Canada, Photo by miv photography

 
AWARDS & HONORS

Kapwani Kiwanga won the National Gallery of Canada’s 2018 Sobey Art Award which includes a $100,000 prize. She is the first black artist to receive the award since it was established in 2002 recognizing the latest developments in Canadian contemporary art. Working across a range of mediums from sound and performance to sculpture and video, Kiwanga marries “her training in anthropology, comparative religion and documentary film with her interests in history, memory and storytelling.” Earlier this year, she won the inaugural Frieze Artist Award in New York. Born in Hamilton, Ontario, Kiwanga lives and works in Paris.

Kapwani Kiwanga is the first black artist to receive the Sobey Art Award since it was established in 2002 recognizing the latest developments in Canadian contemporary art.

Hilton Als won the City College of New York’s Langston Hughes Medal. A Pulitzer Prize-winning cultural critic at The New Yorker, Als curated “Alice Neel: Uptown” at David Zwirner (New York City) and Victoria Miro (London) galleries and authored the exhibition catalog.

Designer Kerby Jean-Raymond of Pyer Moss won the top prize at the 2018 CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund awards. Recognizing the best emerging designers in American fashion, the recognition includes $400,000.

New Jersey artist Sondra Perry won the biennial Nam June Paik Award for artists working with video and computer-based media from Kunststiftung NRW, the arts foundation. She accepted the $28,000 award at the Westfälischer Kunstverein in Münster, Germany.

The winners of Artadia’s 2018 Atlanta awards are artists Krista Clark and William Downs. Each will receive $10,000 in unrestricted funds.

 


The Souls Grown Deep Foundation has arranged gift/purchases with 12 museums including the Morgan Library & Museum in New York, which recently acquired by Purvis Young’s “Sometimes I Get Emotion From the Game,” early 1980s (ballpoint pen and marker, on paper glued to found book).

 
ACQUISITIONS

Two Smithsonian museums have jointly acquired Arthur Jafa‘s “Love is the Message, The Message is Death,” a seminal work that reflects the African American experience and the state of race and politics. The American Art Museum and Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden acquired the 7.5-minute, single-channel video, which is composed of a montage of images set to the music of Kanye West (“Ultralight Beam”). “Love is the Message…” was recently on view for nearly at year at the Hirshhorn, featured in the exhibition “The Message: New Media Works” (Nov. 18, 2017-Sept. 23, 2018).

The Souls Grown Deep Foundation in Atlanta has amassed a collection of more than 1,300 objects by Southern African American artists including Thornton Dial, Nellie Mae Roe, Lonnie Holley, Purvis Young, and the quilters of Gee’s Bend. The foundation has been collaborating with museums around the country recently to add works to their collections through gift/purchase arrangements. A new series of acquisitions was just announced with works going to five new museums—the Brooklyn Museum, the Morgan Library & Museum, Spelman College Museum of Fine Art, the Dallas Museum of Art and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

 


JOHN AKOMFRAH, “Purple,” 2017 (six-channel HD color video installation with 15.1 surround sound; 62 minutes). | Courtesy Lisson Gallery. © Smoking Dogs Films

 
PROJECTS & UNVEILINGS

Professors Kellie Jones (Columbia University) and Steven Nelson (UCLA) are collaborating as co-editors on a new series of publications at Duke University Press. Visual Arts of Africa and its Diasporas will focus on “pathbreaking approaches to studying the multifaceted and multilocated arts and architecture produced by peoples of African descent around the world.” The first book in the series, “Bloodflowers: Rotimi Fani-Kayode, Photography, and the 1980s” by W. Ian Bourland, is scheduled for publication in February/March 2019.

John Akomfrah has been selected as the 2018 artist for ICA Boston’s Watershed. The Ghanaian-born filmmaker lives and works in London. Akomfrah is presenting “Purple,” a video installation about the implications of climate change, for the first time in the United States ( May 26-Sept. 2, 2019).

A new postage stamp paying tribute to “sexy sexy soul singer” Marvin Gaye (1939-1984) is forthcoming in 2019 from the U.S. Postal Service. Part of the Music Icons series, Gaye’s image is illustrated by Kadir Nelson. The 42nd stamp in the Black Heritage series will also be introduced next year featuring actor and tap dancer Gregory Hines (1946–2003).

Artist and designer Malene Barnett recently founded the Black Artists + Designers Guild (BADG), with a mission to increase representation of creatives in the design world and help editors, manufacturers, and clients find talent. “Now there are no excuses,” said Barnett, who has garnered support from interior designer Sheila Bridges, among many others. FIND MORE about BADG

 
OPPORTUNITIES

The next edition of the Black Portraiture[s] conference in October 2019 is titled “Memory and the Archive, 1619-2019. Past/Present/Future.” Organizers of Black Portraiture[s] V at New York University are seeking summary abstracts for papers or panels “related to the subject of the trans-Atlantic slavery and its profound contemporary resonances in artistic methods and archives that span visual and performing arts, architecture and structures of public memory.” The submission deadline is Dec. 15, 2018.

In South Carolina, the North Charleston Cultural Arts Department is inviting fiber artists throughout the United States to participate in its 13th Annual African American Fiber Art Exhibition. For consideration, the deadline for submissions (which require a $30 fee) is March 1, 2019. CT

 

TOP IMAGE: ARTHUR JAFA, Installation view “Love is the Message, The Message is Death,” 2016, The Message: New Media Works at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian, Washington, D.C., 2017. Courtesy of Arthur Jafa and Gavin Brown’s enterprise, New York/Rome. Photo by Cathy Carver

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