Yeah, Kara Walker on some other stuff. Now she's pimp'n out her divorce from her ex into her work. She understands her audience though, especially with that MacArthur fellowship in her pocket.
Wardell, Titus and Demetrius are in a collective together as a matter of fact. Titus is hot right now.
I saw Jamal Cyrus and Kara Walker's work a month ago-KW
Really? Where was this?
Soldat Senegalais. I couldn't even find it mentioned in my books. Not that I have the illest collection of art books. There are pretty good books I'm sure you'll like of contemporary artists. One is Vitamin D (Drawing) the other is Vitamin P (Painting). I only have Vitamin D. It has the artists your interested in and more.
Cordova gets mad respect. He's like Floyd Mayweather with these Museums.
I saw something in the NY Times a while back about the three of them having a collective exhibition, I already knew abt Titus and got to know of Wardell Milan that way.
Kara Walker and Jamal Cyrus were at an exhibition at the Liverpool Slavery Museum over 5 rooms of art from the modernist to contemporary period - Kara Walker had a series of *disturbing* presentations. How's she representing her divorce in her art?
The piece I asked about is an ol' school painting by James A Porter done in 1935. Its thought to be a representation of Feral Benga, the Senegalese dancer who lived in France. Maybe you know James Barthes sculpture with the same name. I'm trying to find out stuff about him cos I think there's something unsettling about the way he's talked abt as a homoerotic icon. Not that there's much out there on him, but from what I've read and the representations of Benga at the time.
The erotic obsession with the naked Black form really bugs me - it not always the mark of 'resistance' and 'high art' that the Plantation celebrates. This mass consumption extends to all areas, not just art - and even when we as Black people represent outselves some still operate within the Plantation paradigm. I'm not an artist so my interpretation is as a prudish observer (not to say I don't get naked art, I do - but it's a thin line) so as an expert y'might hip me to something I'm failing to appreciate.
I only an expert in what I have certainty of knowledge of, that one day I'll disclose once I'm certain of it, lol. I do appreciate the compliment though. On that note, I like what Roy Lichtenstein said when asked how he defines art, he said, “I don’t know anymore.” An artist to me is always interested in what’s behind the backdrop. More interested in the “how” of an audience being charmed by the play as oppose to being charmed by the play themselves…and documenting that as the most significant aspect of one's experience. Most of the time at my own art shows I slip in to be left alone to watch the viewer as if they are a film. I can stand right next to someone and front like I'm experiencing the work for the first time. Most of the time someone recognizes you and "eff it up like a blind look-out."
The artist articulates nuances in culture, exposes the emperors nudity, able to exploit the primal, intrinsic qualities of people or society. The title artist is also a protection from being accused of reading too much into things. LOL. But they are the ones that are the creators as oppose to being the consumer.
Anyway, I understand what some artists are doing with nudes. Conversation surrounding ethnic group’s historical status as property. I read somewhere someone explaining it as segregated black bodies, "well-behaved," resisting bodily constraint in a public discourse. Arguing their precipitously attempt of a therapeutic gesture. Reasoning that you can’t disclose any embarrassing imperfections of a subject if it has already made those embarrassments public with an even more incendiary gesture. Which is what’s interesting about the strategies through out Prince’s career (influencing the parental advisory label) and even today the thug image in rappers. Prince was never an artist that media could unearth any dirt on because with his imagery he could always say, “Oh you didn’t know.” Likewise with the “gansta rapper” you can’t reduce someone’s sainthood if they never claimed it from the start. Like the line in the Spook who Sat by the Door, that you can’t fall out of bed if you are sleeping on the floor. I understand nude work used in that way, but in my opinion the “thug” image articulates that narrative more efficiently. In that is also a conversation about Bruce Lee and the influence on black males in the 70’s, another conversation.
Also some acknowledge the flesh (by nude art) as but a coating for the skeleton that we’re all destined to become. The conversation of post-coital tristesse surrounding the erotic drawings of Egon Schiele. Decay of physical pleasures, vanishing realities. Those are several of the positions that stand out in my mind. Sometimes I tend to be suspect of some artists that come out of graduate school and haven’t really worked out a direction in their mind, sometimes nude art, which has always contributed to the romanticism and the mystique of the artist, is at times their starting pistol.
"Oh Shit! ... GMO Food Sterilizes People ... And It's Really A Form of Population Control?"
"There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment. How often, or on what system, the Thought Police plugged in on any individual wire was guesswork. It was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time. But at any rate they could plug in your wire whenever they wanted to. You had to live—did live, from habit that became instinct—in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard, and, except in darkness, every movement scrutinized."
INTELLECTUAL INSURRECTIONISTS
Alexander King, Bertrand Schneider - founder Club of Rome - The First Global Revolution, pp.104-105
"In searching for a new enemy to unite us, we came up with the idea that pollution, the threat of global warming, water shortages, famine and the like would fit the bill ... All these dangers are caused by human intervention and it is only through changed attitudes and behaviour that they can be overcome. The real enemy, then, is humanity itself."
Were We All Kunta Kinte? Or Are We Also Mansa Musa?
Plantation Negros & The New World Order
Illuminati Want My Mind Soul & My Body - A DV Joint
Barry Goldwater 1909-1998
"Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. And moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue. "
Robert Mugabe Speaks To Thunderous Approval At Harlem's Mount Olive Baptist Church
The Honorable Elijah Muhammad
"It Is Easier To Change A Man's Religion Than It Is To Change His Diet"
Private Prison Industry
2,000,000 human beings in American prisons and counting
IS THIS LITTLE GUY A PERSON?
The founders of the American state understood that the proper functioning of a democracy required an educated electorate. It is this understanding that justifies a system of public education and that led slaveholders to resist the spread of literacy among their chattels. But the meaning of "educated" has changed beyond recognition in two hundred years. Reading, writing, and arithmetic are no longer sufficient to decide on public policy. Now we need quantum mechanics and molecular biology. The knowledge required for political rationality, once available to the masses, is now in the possession of a specially educated elite, a situation that creates a series of tensions and contradictions in the operation of representative democracy.
Greater Display of Conspicuous Consumption?
"Unthinking respect for authority is the greatest enemy of truth.”
Margaret Sanger. Woman, Morality, and Birth Control. New York: New York Publishing Company, 1922. P
"We should hire three or four colored ministers, preferably with social-service backgrounds, and with engaging personalities. The most successful educational approach to the Negro is through a religious appeal. We don’t want the word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population. and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members."
Louis Pasteur
"The Microbe is nothing. The terrain is everything."
A DV JOINT
Ask Denmark Vesey
DenmarkVesey1822@hotmail.com
Chris Hedges Warns of The Dangers of The "New Atheists" and "Secular Fundamentalists"
Beverly Johnson. Beverly Hills. 1978
Do You Consider Yourself:
"Bra! Tell Me About It!"
"Most of the trouble I have had in advancing the cause of the race has come from Negroes."
Is President Barack Hussein Obama The Driving Force Behind US Policy?
Ted Turner - CNN founder and UN supporter - quoted in the The McAlvany Intelligence Advisor, June '
"A total population of 250-300 million people, a 95% decline from present levels, would be ideal."
Lord Bertrand Russell, The Impact of Science On Society (Routledge Press: New York, 1951).
"At present the population of the world is increasing at about 58,000 per diem. War, so far, has had no very great effect on this increase, which continued throughout each of the world wars.. War has hitherto been disappointing in this respect, but perhaps bacteriological war may prove effective. If a Black Death could spread throughout the world once in every generation, survivors could procreate freely without making the world too full. The state of affairs might be unpleasant, but what of it?"
Denmark Vesey For President 08
1. Troops Out Of Iraq Immediately. Like By Monday. 2. Money Owed To Haliburton and War Contractors Be Given Directly To The Iraqi People 3. Complete Electoral Reform 4. No Corporate Conglomerate Will Be Allowed To Control More Than 5% Of News Market 5. Federal Reserve Abolished 6. For-Profit Prison Industry Abolished
*George Orwell (1903-1950) English novelist, critic
Men can only be happy when they do not assume that the object of life is happiness... If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear... The great enemy of clear language is insincerity... The quickest way of ending a war is to lose it... To see what is in front of one's nose requires a constant struggle... For a creative writer possession of the truth is less important than emotional sincerity.
“The technotronic era involves the gradual appearance of a more controlled society. Such a society will be dominated by an elite, unrestrained by traditional values.” – Zbigniew Brzezinski
God Don't Make No Mistakes
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Gordon Parks 1912-2006
"I suffered evils, but without allowing them to rob me of the freedom to expand."
4 comments:
From the other thread
Gee Chee said:
Yeah, Kara Walker on some other stuff. Now she's pimp'n out her divorce from her ex into her work. She understands her audience though, especially with that MacArthur fellowship in her pocket.
Wardell, Titus and Demetrius are in a collective together as a matter of fact. Titus is hot right now.
I saw Jamal Cyrus and Kara Walker's work a month ago-KW
Really? Where was this?
Soldat Senegalais. I couldn't even find it mentioned in my books. Not that I have the illest collection of art books. There are pretty good books I'm sure you'll like of contemporary artists. One is Vitamin D (Drawing) the other is Vitamin P (Painting). I only have Vitamin D. It has the artists your interested in and more.
Cordova gets mad respect. He's like Floyd Mayweather with these Museums.
I'll ask about the painting this week.
Gee Chee,
I saw something in the NY Times a while back about the three of them having a collective exhibition, I already knew abt Titus and got to know of Wardell Milan that way.
Kara Walker and Jamal Cyrus were at an exhibition at the Liverpool Slavery Museum over 5 rooms of art from the modernist to contemporary period - Kara Walker had a series of *disturbing* presentations. How's she representing her divorce in her art?
The piece I asked about is an ol' school painting by James A Porter done in 1935. Its thought to be a representation of Feral Benga, the Senegalese dancer who lived in France. Maybe you know James Barthes sculpture with the same name. I'm trying to find out stuff about him cos I think there's something unsettling about the way he's talked abt as a homoerotic icon. Not that there's much out there on him, but from what I've read and the representations of Benga at the time.
The erotic obsession with the naked Black form really bugs me - it not always the mark of 'resistance' and 'high art' that the Plantation celebrates. This mass consumption extends to all areas, not just art - and even when we as Black people represent outselves some still operate within the Plantation paradigm. I'm not an artist so my interpretation is as a prudish observer (not to say I don't get naked art, I do - but it's a thin line) so as an expert y'might hip me to something I'm failing to appreciate.
Kay Double-U (but one Kay is deep enough),
I only an expert in what I have certainty of knowledge of, that one day I'll disclose once I'm certain of it, lol. I do appreciate the compliment though. On that note, I like what Roy Lichtenstein said when asked how he defines art, he said, “I don’t know anymore.” An artist to me is always interested in what’s behind the backdrop. More interested in the “how” of an audience being charmed by the play as oppose to being charmed by the play themselves…and documenting that as the most significant aspect of one's experience. Most of the time at my own art shows I slip in to be left alone to watch the viewer as if they are a film. I can stand right next to someone and front like I'm experiencing the work for the first time. Most of the time someone recognizes you and "eff it up like a blind look-out."
The artist articulates nuances in culture, exposes the emperors nudity, able to exploit the primal, intrinsic qualities of people or society. The title artist is also a protection from being accused of reading too much into things. LOL. But they are the ones that are the creators as oppose to being the consumer.
Anyway, I understand what some artists are doing with nudes. Conversation surrounding ethnic group’s historical status as property. I read somewhere someone explaining it as segregated black bodies, "well-behaved," resisting bodily constraint in a public discourse.
Arguing their precipitously attempt of a therapeutic gesture. Reasoning that you can’t disclose any embarrassing imperfections of a subject if it has already made those embarrassments public with an even more incendiary gesture. Which is what’s interesting about the strategies through out Prince’s career (influencing the parental advisory label) and even today the thug image in rappers. Prince was never an artist that media could unearth any dirt on because with his imagery he could always say, “Oh you didn’t know.” Likewise with the “gansta rapper” you can’t reduce someone’s sainthood if they never claimed it from the start. Like the line in the Spook who Sat by the Door, that you can’t fall out of bed if you are sleeping on the floor. I understand nude work used in that way, but in my opinion the “thug” image articulates that narrative more efficiently. In that is also a conversation about Bruce Lee and the influence on black males in the 70’s, another conversation.
Also some acknowledge the flesh (by nude art) as but a coating for the skeleton that we’re all destined to become. The conversation of post-coital tristesse surrounding the erotic drawings of Egon Schiele. Decay of physical pleasures, vanishing realities. Those are several of the positions that stand out in my mind. Sometimes I tend to be suspect of some artists that come out of graduate school and haven’t really worked out a direction in their mind, sometimes nude art, which has always contributed to the romanticism and the mystique of the artist, is at times their starting pistol.
Anything at La Luz De Jesus gallery in LA is interesting.
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