Archive for the ‘Black Lives Matter’ Category

Books, Wefts, and Black Lives Matter at the Baltimore Museum of Art – Hyperallergic

Kiki Smith, Tidal (1998), on view as part of Off the Shelf: Modern & Contemporary Artists Books (2017), The Baltimore Museum of Art (photo by Mitro Hood)

Fog enveloped Phan-Xi-Pang, Indochinas tallest peak, in an ocean of vanilla milkshakes. You could drink the air with a straw.

Touring Vietnam during the past two months, I eagerly anticipated painting and drawing the mountains I found pictured online. Unfortunately, clouds and fog often hid the range like the closed covers of a book, day after frustrating day. Frustrating, that is, until I embraced the mystery of what was there Robert Ryman on swimmy steroids rather than longing for what wasnt.

Shortly before leaving the US, I had a related experience. I was at a press preview for a show called Off the Shelf: Modern & Contemporary Artists Books at the Baltimore Museum of Art, where being unable to see all that I wanted to see played first a troubling role, then an enticing one.

Artists books tend to be rare and fragile. They need to be protected. Hence the vitrines, which, along with closed covers and fixed, double-page spreads, prohibit a full read. It is, however, a treat to see any part of these inventive objects.

Of course, there are many works of art beset by obstacles that limit our viewing experience. We stand far below that colossal, every-page-visible-at-once picture book known as Michelangelos Sistine Chapel. Who wouldnt like a more optimum look at the narratives muscling their way across a vaulted heaven? Who wouldnt like to get up close and personal with Adam or Eve, or to bite into an apple from that tree in their garden? We cant. But we take what we can get.

Compare this to the thwarted desire to leaf through the pages of the publisher Ambroise Vollards 1931 edition of The Unknown Masterpiece (Le Chef-dOeuvre Inconnu) by Honor de Balzac, the first book I was drawn to upon entering Off the Shelf. Six of the etchings by Pablo Picasso that accompany this tragic literary classic about art and seeing, which hang directly above the book. The illustrations can be treasured independently, as can the French authors words. But when a great story and great images merge, its magic.

With one exception (a promised gift), all the works in Off the Shelf are from the BMAs collection. Rena Hoisington, Senior Curator of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs, curated wisely, as well as helped design the individual displays and overall galleries. On monitors in an adjoining room, viewers can scroll through numerous books from the exhibition, allowing for a more start-to-finish eyeballing (albeit virtual) experience. One of my scrolling favorites is Paul Verlaines once-banned, sapphic Side by Side (Paralllement, 1900), sinuously illustrated by Pierre Bonnard. In what is considered by many to be the first modern livre dartiste (artists book), the artists rose-sanguine marks echo the look and spirit of Verlaines words, which were printed on cream-colored pages in a fluid, Renaissance font designed by Claude Garamond.

Bonnards sprawling lithographs sometimes corral and always counter the boxy boundaries of italicized type. Often, it seems as if the women he portrays are being coaxed from, or are dissolving into, the papers humid sensuality, nude figures sparely drawn here, detailed there. Like a storm cloud, in a section entitled Sappho, a sweeping arc of dark, braiding hair from two embracing women further exhilarates their impassioned moment.

Off the Shelf is an intimate exhibit of small gems. The works spring from inspired painter/writer pairings of showstopper sensibilities, including Grace Hartigan/James Schuyler; David Hockney/The Brothers Grimm; Susan Rothenberg/Robert Creeley; and Jasper Johns/Samuel Beckett. With few exceptions, like the over-sized and weighty My Pretty Pony, a steel-covered undertaking by Barbara Kruger and Stephen King, these editions are not what, 30 years ago, my then-three-year old daughter would have referred to as two-handed books. But despite their mostly midsize proportions, these images and objects have a king-size impact, partly because creative combos are sharing the more private but no less profound sides of themselves. And we get to peek.

Few of the more than 130 artists books and related prints in this show are ever seen in public, yet they are decidedly social in nature. Visual artists team up with other visual artists, as well as with poets, novelists, fairytale writers, book designers, typographers, typesetters, and publishers.

Hands down, the biggest social event of Off the Shelf takes the form of 1 Cent Life (1964), a celebration of art and poetry that brought together the disparate styles of abstraction and Pop. Walasse Ting and Sam Francis invited 28 blue-chip artists, ranging from Robert Rauschenberg, Roy Lichtenstein, and Andy Warhol, to James Rosenquist, Joan Mitchell, and Tom Wesselmann. The boisterous affair included 172 pages filled with 62 lithographs and 62 poems (written by Ting).

In this exhibition, pages turn, hang, separate, and fold. When unfolded, the accordion books, Tidal (1998), by Kiki Smith, and Ed Ruschas Every Building on the Sunset Strip (1966), reveal elegant, elongated proportions with sleek, unique formats.

With computer screens replacing paper pages, a show like Off the Shelf is timelier than it would have been less than a decade ago. It remains to be seen whether tactile books become less important due to their cost and the diminishment of their practical necessity, or more important through their physicality and personality. Big money is on the former. I hope its the latter.

* * *

Another show currently at the Baltimore Museum of Art isTimeless Weft: Ancient Tapestries and the Art of Louise B. Wheatley. Anita Jones, the museums Curator of Textiles, installed weavings from Wheatleys more than 40-year career alongside a series of ancient Egyptian Coptic fabric works. The historical conversation that unfolds between the contemporary weavers works and the time-old textiles enriches them both.

Content, color, texture, and technique represent visible connections between the two bodies of work. And then there are invisible links that become an evocation of time. The Coptic weavings have missing invisible parts, which have been lost over the centuries. Ive always been a sucker for fragments, where the harsh blade and the delicate patina of centuries reconfigure shapes and dimensions, add subtlety to surface, and glaze the beauty of age across pristine colors. Fragments lead to fantasy. What could have been depicted in the no-longer-visible parts surrounding the stylized hares racing through several borders of an Egyptian 10th-11th-century silk and linen textile? The fragment adorns a wall not much more than a vitrine away from its contemporary counterpart, Wheatleys Rabbit (2014). From threads to shreds and back again, in my imagination I complete the story.

Although some of Wheatleys finely crafted weavings are large, many are about the length of a long finger. But even the artists tiniest textiles deliver with the might of a fog that can erase a mountain, as we see in both her portrayal of a gangly insect, Walking Stick (c. 1995), and a biblical hero, David (c. 1991), as he kneels (in one panel of a pocket-size triptych) to look for the stone with which he will defeat Goliath.

One of the larger wall hangings, Fruits of the Spirit (c. 1991), struck me initially as being dominated by three vertical strips of flat black. The central strip backs a charming, light-toned portrait of a pear tree that grows on the artists farm in Maryland. Turns out, the dark strips arent black at all, or flat, for that matter, but rather as a close inspection reveals a blend of deep tones, textures, and colors.

This tapestry does with shade what another of her works, Egg Collection(2005) does with shine. Here, variations in the figure/ground relationships, the finely spun warm and cool off-white ovals, and the quivering grid containing the now-you-see-them-now-you-dont eggs create a slow, playful bounce to this fragile yet solid work. Its as if the artist took a bunch of eggs, shook them up, and not only did not a one of em crack, they all seem to revel in the delicacy of the dance of their white-on-white invisibility.

Wheatleys range of subjects is impressive. With heft and weft, she is equally expressive formally, psychologically, and spiritually at addressing pear trees and eggs, darkness and light, bugs and the bible.

* * *

For merging words and images, these are red-letter days on Baltimores Art Museum Drive. In a third show at the BMA, Front Room: Adam Pendleton, the words are the images. In Pendletons case, his ABCs are white, gray, and black not red sometimes spanning the walls from floor to ceiling.

Several works feature variations of the rallying cry Black Lives Matter, which has a trenchant meaning in Baltimore after the death of Freddie Grey. Gestural, sprayed, dripped, printed, broken, cropped, layered, rotated, and wiped-away, the letters simultaneously weave information, emotion, frustration, and hope into a powerful humanistic, social, and political message.

Like the BMAs books, Wheatleys textiles and Pendeltons mixed-media ventures pack a punch (actually, hers is more of a lingering touch). With her, you dont see it coming; with him, you can feel the vibrations down the block. Her mists/his missiles, resounding, both.

Off the Shelf: Modern & Contemporary Artists Books continues through June 25; Timeless Weft: Ancient Tapestries and the Art of Louise B. Wheatley continues through July 30; and Front Room: Adam Pendleton continues through October 1.

All three exhibitions are located at the Baltimore Museum of Art (10 Art Museum Drive, Baltimore, Maryland).

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Books, Wefts, and Black Lives Matter at the Baltimore Museum of Art - Hyperallergic

State’s motion denied in case of Black Lives Matter protesters … – WCSH-TV

Chris Costa and NEWS CENTER , WCSH 11:50 PM. EDT May 24, 2017

By admitting to a charge of disorderly conduct, 17 protesters who were arrested during a Black Lives Matter demonstration in Portland avoid going to trial.

PORTLAND, Maine (NEWS CENTER) -- A judge's ruling sets the stage for another attempt at restorative justice between a group of Black Lives Matter protesters and Portland Police.

Cumberland County Superior Court Justice Lance Walker on Wednesday denied a motion by the State of Maine to seek a new solution after a plea deal with protesters fell apart.

"We feel good about that," said defense attorney Tina Nadeau, who represents some of the protesters. "We had strong arguments in the hearing. The judge obviously spent quite a bit of time reviewing testimony and thinking about the issue, and rendered a pretty thoughtful opinion."

Cumberland County district attorney Stephanie Anderson said the order was "well-reasoned," as well.

However, the judge wrote in the order that, unless the plea agreement is amended, both parties will still have to participate in a restorative justice session.

During a news conference Wednesday afternoon, Cumberland County district attorney Stephanie Anderson said the State has no plans to pursue any restorative justice session. She said that if the protesters came to them and wanted to have a conversation, they would be amenable to it.

"They've had three opportunities to discuss their grievances, and they haven't wanted to do that," said Anderson. "We've decided to let the whole restorative justice conversation go because we don't think it will be fruitful. Everything that I've seen indicates that they did not want to have a conversation. I still don't know what their beef is in Portland or against the Portland Police Department and there hasn't been anything that's happened since July 15 to give me any indication to what it is."

If the sides do not fulfill the agreement within six months, the criminal charges will be dismissed. Currently they are "filed, but inactive," according to Anderson, meaning the court would have to approve the charges to become active, but Anderson said it would only happen if the protesters committed a new crime.

WATCH: Cumberland Co. DA's office responds to judicial ruling that denied its motion to seek restoration of charges in BLM case

"I'd feel like justice was done in this case," Anderson said about if the charges were dismissed. "We wanted to understand what their concerns were. We wanted to have a conversation with them. We're disappointed that they don't want to do that, but we're fine with the way it worked out."

Nadeau believes her clients already fulfilled that requirement when they arrived at the original restorative justice session, demanding to meet as one large group, instead of in two separate sessions as the DAs had scheduled.

"Just because they didn't reach an end point or an agreement with the DA's office at the end doesn't mean that the session was a failure, it just means it was at an earlier stage than I think the DA's office would have wanted," said Nadeau.

The order states that the State was required to "perform its obligation to participate in the meeting or allow the meeting to go forward." Fred Van Liew, the restorative practices coordinator, told one attorney that he could facilitate a meeting with the entire group together.

"Participate is the key word here, and they did participate," said Nadeau. "It doesn't say complete to the satisfaction of the DA. It says 'participate,' and they made every attempt to."

"They're just protesters. They don't have a message. They don't have a complaint. They don't have nothing to say except Black Lives Matter and that's a bumper sticker," said Anderson. "I'd still like to hear what they'd like to say."

The DA's office plans to hold a news conference at 4:30 this afternoon to address the State's response to the order.

RELATED: Police arrest 18 in Black Lives Matters protest

The protest last July was part of a nationwide campaign calling for improvements in the relationship between police agencies and people of color. In order to ensure their voices were heard, protesters demonstrated in the middle of on Commercial Street in Portland, bringing traffic to a stop. When protesters refused to allow traffic to pass, police arrested 17 of them.

RELATED:Black Lives Matter ruling

To keep criminal charges off their records, attorneys for the protesters entered into an agreement with the district attorney's office. The deal required protesters to meet with police at a restorative justice center with the goal of helping both sides come to a better understanding.

RELATED: Jude to decide if Black Lives Matter protesters will face charges

But the meeting never happened, and both sides blamed the other for breaking their agreement. The district attorney's office wanted the protesters to split into two groups for the meeting with police, while protesters said they would only meet if they could all stay together. Attorneys for the protesters said they would not have agreed to the meeting if they had known there would be no flexibility.

In his review of the dispute, Justice Walker said district attorney's office was within its authority to set boundaries for the meeting. Although the protesters refused to comply, Walker said their willingness to meet under other circumstances did not constitute a total breach of contract. For that reason, Walker said the terms of the plea agreement still apply and both sides should work toward fulfilling them.

2017 WCSH-TV

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State's motion denied in case of Black Lives Matter protesters ... - WCSH-TV

Black Lives Matter Awarded the 2017 Sydney Peace Prize

Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

In a groundbreaking departure from tradition, the prestigious international award that recognizes peacemakers around the world for promoting human rights, nonviolence and peace with justice will not be awarded to an individual. Instead, The Guardian reports that the 2017 Sydney Peace Prize will go to the Black Lives Matter movement.

Former winners Naomi Klein and Pat Dodson hail recognition of US-founded movement that resonates

Since 1998, Australias Sydney University has honored an individual who embodied the spirit of fighting injustice with peace. This year marks the first time the Sydney Foundation has chosen a movement instead of a single person as a recipient of the prize.

Global peacemakers and past award recipients applauded the Sydney Foundations choice as bold and inspired. 2008 winner Pat Dodson, who won for his advocacy of Aborigines and Torres Pacifica Islanders, hailed Black Lives Matter as a movement that stood against ignorance, hostility, discrimination, or racism.

The Black Lives Matter movement was founded by Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza and Opal Tometi after the 2013 acquittal of George Zimmerman, who stalked and killed 17-year-old Trayvon Marting in Sanford, Fla. Their efforts blossomed into a global movement that fights against injustice for people of color.

The prize will be awarded to the three co-founders at a November ceremony in Sydney. Past recipients include Desmond Tutu, Noam Chomsky and Muhammad Yunus, who also won the Nobel Peace Prize for pioneering the concept of microcredit and microfinance.

In a separate announcement, the Worldwide Humanitarian International Tribunal for the Empowerment and Theft of Attention, Remorse and Sorrow (WHITETEARS) announced that it will honor All Lives Matter with the 2017 Wypipo Achievement Award.

Read more at The Guardian.

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Black Lives Matter Awarded the 2017 Sydney Peace Prize

Black Lives Matter march draws more than 100 to downtown …

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Police estimated that roughly 150 people showed up for Saturday's Black Lives Matter march.

Police estimated that roughly 150 people showed up for Saturday's Black Lives Matter march.

During Saturday's march and rally, Ashton Woods announced his intention to run for City Hall in 2019.

During Saturday's march and rally, Ashton Woods announced his intention to run for City Hall in 2019.

Ashton Woods and other Black Lives Matter leaders addressed the crowd outside City Hall.

Ashton Woods and other Black Lives Matter leaders addressed the crowd outside City Hall.

Protesters Saturday walked from Discovery Green to City Hall.

Protesters Saturday walked from Discovery Green to City Hall.

Black Lives Matter march draws more than 100 to downtown Houston

Shouts of "Black Lives Matter!" echoed down Houston streets Saturday during a spirited solidarity march ending outside City Hall, where activist Ashton Woods announced his intention to run for City Council in 2019.

"It's time for new people to be in office. It's time for new people to take the helm and to protect people who are marginalized and on the fringes," he said in an interview before the rally. "As you can see, new fringes are being created every day."

Saturday's event - scheduled immediately after an earlier protest targeting the so-called "sanctuary cities" law - started at Discovery Green before the group of more than 150 marchers set off down Walker.

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Waving signs and holding banners, protesters shouted, "This is what democracy looks like," and, "Hey, hey, ho, ho, killer cops have got to go."

The gathering aimed to promote solidarity, support human rights and target police brutality.

"Today is the march for human rights," Woods said. "Every community that you can think of has come under attack, so this event is a solidarity event."

A strong police presence escorted the crowd through the street as protesters set off for City Hall around 5:30 p.m.

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"It's not about Donald Trump, you can impeach him all day," Woods told the crowd from the steps of City Hall.

"But they got a bunch of Donald Trumps right here in Houston. So I've decided to raise hell in City Council."

He went on to slam the city's new ordinances targeting homelessness and panhandling and then vowed to "dismantle the f--- out of the system."

After revving up the crowd, Woods introduced a new crop of local organizers, including Bobbie Hoskins.

"What I'm really passionate about is community involvement," she told the crowd. "We can come out and we can rally and we can march and we can stand in solidarity and that is all necessary as well, but what we need to do is do some groundwork and get into the communities."

Another new voice in the local movement was Chris Malone, who spoke about solidarity and black lives.

"I'm black, I'm gay, and I'm afraid," he said. "And I'm pissed the f--- off."

A number of other speakers took the megaphone and aired their concerns for the community, all while the crowd roared its support.

When the gathering finally broke up before 7 p.m., the protesters dispersed peacefully as police looked on.

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Black Lives Matter march draws more than 100 to downtown ...

Black Lives Matter awarded 2017 Sydney peace prize | US news … – The Guardian

Black Lives Matter founders Opal Tometi, Patrisse Marie Cullors, Alicia Garza. The movement has been awarded the Sydney peace prize.

The human rights movement Black Lives Matter has won this years Sydney peace prize.

The movement which will be honoured in Sydney in November was founded in the US by Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza and Opal Tometi after the 2013 acquittal of George Zimmerman, who had been accused of murdering black teenager Trayvon Martin.

Each year the Sydney Peace Foundation honours a nominee who has promoted peace with justice, human rights and non-violence. Past recipients include Julian Burnside, Prof Noam Chomsky and the former Irish president Mary Robinson.

Western Australian Labor senator Pat Dodson, who was awarded the Sydney peace prize in 2008 for his advocacy for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, applauded the selection of Black Lives Matter as a movement that stood against ignorance, hostility, discrimination, or racism.

This movement resonates around the globe and here in Australia, where we have become inured to the high incarceration rates and deaths in custody of our Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, Dodson said. Its as if their lives do not matter.

For our communities, the storyline is all too familiar: the minor offence; the innocuous behaviour; the unnecessary detention; the failure to uphold the duty of care; the lack of respect for human dignity; the lonely death; the grief, loss and pain of the family the coronial report where no one is held responsible for a death in custody.

Last years recipient, Naomi Klein, said Cullors, Garza and Tometi embody the core principle of the Sydney peace prize: that there will never be peace without real justice.

This is an inspired, bold and urgent choice and its exactly what our moment of overlapping global crises demands, Klein said.

The selection is likely to be controversial with some who associate Black Lives Matter with images of week-long and occasionally violent protests at Ferguson, Missouri, following the fatal police shooting of 18-year-old Mike Brown in 2014.

But those images, and the protests themselves, which have been repeated across the United States, only tell part of the story, said co-founder Patrisse Cullors.

Were not just about hitting the streets or direct action its a humanising project, she told Guardian Australia. Were trying to re-imagine humanity and bring us to a place where we can decide how we want to be in relation to each other versus criminalising our neighbours or being punitive towards them.

Cullors said an aspect of that was evaluating the role of police, looking at the underlying causes of incidents which draw police attention and questioning whether police can address the problem.

The complicated part of this is the question becomes: do we need police? Are police going to give us ultimate safety? Cullors said.

In our opinion: no, police are not going to give us safety. Weve seen time and time again that actually what they do is provide death In our country, police are the first responders to people with psychiatric issues, police are the first responders to drug use and overdose, police are the first responders to issues of domestic violence.

And what we have seen time and time again, when they become the first responders, they dont de-escalate. They actually escalate When they become the first responders, our family members end up dying.

Black people made up 266 of the 1,092 people killed by police in the United States in 2016, according to data collected by the Guardian. While more white people were killed, the rate at which black people were killed was three times higher: 6.6 people per million, second only to Native Americans who were killed at a rate of 10.13 per million.

The prize will be awarded to the co-founders at a Sydney Peace Foundation dinner in November. They will also deliver the City of Sydney peace lecture at a public ceremony.

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Black Lives Matter awarded 2017 Sydney peace prize | US news ... - The Guardian