Trisha Brown in “Watermotor”, by Babette Mangolte (1978)
An appreciation by Wendy Perron.
ICA Miami presents In Plain Site.
TBC.
You've got to dig to dig it, you dig?
Trisha Brown in “Watermotor”, by Babette Mangolte (1978)
An appreciation by Wendy Perron.
ICA Miami presents In Plain Site.
TBC.
Star Trek: Discovery (Original Series Soundtrack) [Chapter 2]
Music by Jeff Russo
Label: Lakeshore Records
Episode 3 of Alette Simmons-Jimenez‘s Art & Company Podcast is up.
It is titled Couples – Kathleen Hudspeth & Adler Guerrier, Making Work and Making It Work.
Black Visual Impulse visits Adler Guerrier: Conditions and Forms for blck Longevity at CAAM.
Sancho: An Act of Remembrance
written, conceived and performed by Paterson Joseph. Co-Directed by Simon Godwin.
April 18 – May 6, 2018
The Classical Theatre of Harlem (Ty Jones, Producing Artistic Director), Pemberley Productions and Dr. Barbara Ann Teer’s National Black Theatre are proud to present Sancho: An Act of Remembrance. This timely theater production celebrates the extraordinary life of Charles Ignatius Sancho, an African man who was born on a slave ship and rose to prominence as a noted abolitionist, composer, social satirist and man of refinement in 18th century English society. Sancho makes his mark in history by becoming the first British-African to cast a vote in England in 1774.
Production Team: Ben Park (Music & Sound), Michael Vale (Design), Lucrecia Briceño (Lighting).
… He was born on a slave ship but never a slave. He was immortalized by the great English painter Thomas Gainsborough, and in 1774 became the first British-African to vote. In this revealing and humorous one-man show, celebrated Royal Shakespeare Company actor Paterson Joseph (NBC’s Timeless and HBO’s The Leftovers) inhabits the curious, daringly determined Charles “Sancho” Ignatius—composer, social satirist, general man of refinement—while shining light on the often misunderstood narratives of African-British experience.
BAM – Study guide.
Guide for collecting specimens.
[..]many fields of study utilize herbarium specimens.
The oldest herbarium in existence is believed to be the collections of Gherardo Cibo, a student of by Luca Ghini, in Bologna, Italy, dating from around 1532.

The World’s Game: Fútbol and Contemporary Art at PAMM.