Category: Group Event


The Whimsical Sage – Words at Play for All Ages

Friday, November 25th, 2011
Dec ’11
11
2:00 pm

Sunday, December 11, 2pm – Words, Poetry, Prose

The Whimsical Sage – Words at Play for All Ages

Please join us for a 60 minute presentation of the fun ways that The Whimsical Sage – Words at Play for All Ages, a hardback collection of fun with homonyms, similes, puns, definitions, expressions, words-inside-words, diverse verses, and short stories with playful illustrations, can be used to celebrate words and language with the children (and adults) in your life.

Leeway Foundation Grantee Showcase

Friday, October 28th, 2011
Nov ’11
13
2:00 pm

Sunday, November 13, 2pm – multi-disciplinary showcase
Leeway Foundation Grantee Showcase
Featuring:
Sandra Andino, Deborah Rudman, Gavin Outlaw

& Cassendre Xavier

Sandra Andino (ACG’05, ACG’09) will display a photo-documentary project that explores the Afro-Latino concept, experience, and artistic/cultural expression of Latinos in North Philadelphia. She selected a group of Latino visual artists, performers, and cultural workers from youth to seniors and created a series of portraits that represent them and how they define the Afro-Latino concept. Each piece is accompanied with text extracted from conversations with each of the artists regarding this topic. Her goal is to create social awareness and a collective conscience that Latinos and Latinas have a connection to Africa and African culture(s) in the Diaspora.

Gavin Outlaw (ACG’09) will compose a book of poetry and art related to his life as a transgender artist, including everything from love to politics. Raising consciousness by utilizing artistic prose as a form of empowerment to the trans community, he will challenge transphobia and question mainstream beliefs about the abilities of trans artists. He hopes to inspire unity among his transgender community that is beyond race and class through poetry and books.

Deborah Rudman (ACG’09), in collaboration with Termite TV Collective,  has produced a documentary called Yo! Taxi about the struggles of Philadelphia area Taxi drivers who have been marginalized. Through conversations, testimonials and activities with the Unified Taxi Workers Alliance, the experiences of this highly visible yet silenced population come to life. Creating this unique portraiture brings into focus taxi drivers’ rights, safety conditions, access to healthcare and issues of economic justice. This documentary reveals the human face and voice of a community of workers that is so often forgotten.

Cassendre Xavier is a recipient of the Leeway Transformation Award (2005). She is a Haitian & Chinese-American multi-media artist who works mostly as a singer-songwriter, guitarist, recording artist, and writer. Cassendre has also contributed to Philadelphia’s community cultural arts by founding and directing both the Women’s Writing & Spoken Word Series (Est. 2002 at Moonstone/Robin’s) and the Black Women’s Arts Festival (Est. 2003 at The Rotunda). Visit http://cassEndrExavier.com.

National Writers Union Meeting

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011
Oct ’11
9
3:00 pm

Sunday, October 9, 3pm – National Writers Union
National Writers Union Meeting

The National Writers Union is the only labor union that represents freelance writers in all genres, formats, and media.
“As freelancers we may value our autonomy, but we are united in the fact that we work independently. We face the same challenges, file the same income tax forms, and often suffer the same frustrations. Whether you’re a journalist, a book author or a technical or business writer – whether you write poetry or proposals – the NWU is already working to improve your professional life.

With the combined strength of more than 1,500 members in 15 local chapters nationwide, and with the support of the United Automobile Workers (UAW), the NWU works to advance the economic and working conditions of writers. We do this by challenging the corporate media giants, lobbying Congress to pass legislation that protects the rights of writers, creating viable solutions to provide publishers fair alternatives to unfair practices, and educating and empowering our members.”

NATIONAL BLACK ARTS SPOKEN WORD TOUR

Sunday, July 31st, 2011
Aug ’11
1
10:00 am
Aug ’11
8
10:00 am
Aug ’11
15
10:00 am
Aug ’11
17
10:00 am
Aug ’11
22
10:00 am
Aug ’11
24
10:00 am

NATIONAL BLACK ARTS SPOKEN WORD TOUR & ADELPHIA REPERTORY TOURING COMPANY
Present
2011 Summer Day Performance Series @ MOONSTONE ARTS CENTER

Back by Popular Demand!!!! A full month of discounted and low cost Performances about Peace: Violence and Crime Prevention for all ages during the Month of August 2011!!!

Low Cost and Discounted Group rate tickets are available at $5.00 per person (50% Discount off General Admission Tickets of $10.00) or special arrangements can be made for performances with a workshop to be hosted at your facility or Summer location. Each performance is 1 hour! Checks and Credit Cards will be accepted!!!!

Monday, August 1, 2011 – 10:00am
“Ain’t You Bad or Aren’t You Kool”
(A Violence Prevention performance about how youth try to fit into groups instead being themselves and the trouble that follows them)

Wednesday, August 3, 2011 – 10:00am
“Around the Block to a Brave New World”
(A Violence Prevention performance about what happens in different neighborhoods and what it takes to grow up happy and proud)

Monday, August 8, 2011 – 10:00am
“I Am Somebody”
(A Violence Prevention Performance about ego-tripping and the development of your own personality without the influence of gangs and other harmful things or people)

Monday, August 15, 2011 – 10:00am
“PEACE in the HOOD”
(A production about Peace and what young people can do to maintain it throughout their home, school and community)

Wednesday, August 17, 2011 & Wednesday, August 24, 2011 – 10:00am
“To Be Young, Black & Gifted with Rap”
(A Violence Prevention production about how Spoken Word and positive Rap Music can be used to influence young people to do the Right Thing!!!!)

Monday, August 22, 2011 10:00am
“Can We All Just Get Along”
(A production about the cause and effects of Violence in Urban Communities and how there is a necessity for Peace amongst young people)

Special Arrangements can also be made for other specified and personally selected days and times of the week at Moonstone Arts Center!!!!


AUTHORS, POETS & SPOKEN WORD RECORDING ARTISTS ARE AVAILABLE FOR SITE VISITS:

Other Performances for Camp and Classroom Visitation (which can be adapted to any space or recreational area)

Themes: Violence & Crime Prevention
(“Ain’t You Bad or Aren’t You Kool”, “I Am Somebody”, “To Be Young, Gifted and Black with Rap”, “The OOPS Upside Your Head,” “NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND – An Arrested Development”, “Around the Block to a Brave New World,” “Holler If You Hear Me” and Other performances)


We have presented at over 30 schools (public, charter, boarding and catholic) schools in the Philadelphia area. We will also be bringing to the City various popular artists who have achieved prominence through books, play, recordings and appearances on radio, television and film on stations such as BET and HBO, etc. These Artists are available to do classroom presentations with discussion and/or an auditorium performance that will highlight the prevention of violence and crime. Please let me know what days you maybe able to bring them to your school and what type of budget you have available.

Feel free to contact me about specific titles and artists appearance roster. You are invited to forward this communication to other Coordinators of Summer Camps, and School Association Officials, etc.

Sincerely yours,

Dr. Maurice Henderson
nationalblackartsspokenwordtour@yahoo.com
mauricebrianhenderson@yahoo.com
(215) 820-7571 05 (267) 230-0317

The National Black Arts Spoken Word Tour’s performances, presentations and staged adaptations have earned sold out attendance, standing ovations and back by popular demand request for return engagements at venues and convening such as the Jacksonville African-America Writers Conference in Florida, The Tavis Smiley Y2L Conference in Washington, D.C., the International Poetry Festival and Concert Series in Virginia, the Hip Hop Forum in Georgia, the Allied Media Conference in Ohio, the Independent Music Conference in Philadelphia, the Grassroots Media Conference in New York, the Hip Hop Generation Conference in Wisconsin, the Marcus Garvey School in Tennessee, the International Black Writers Conference in Illinois, the Black Students Business Association Conference in Michigan, the Jim Isler Conference in North Carolina, the International Writers and Artists Conference in California, Hurston-Wright Foundation Conference of Maryland, the Celebration of Black Writing of Philadelphia, Houston’s Shrine of Black Madonna in Texas,Stamford Downtown Festival in Connecticut, Smith’s College African Students Conference in Massachusett and the National African American Student Leadership Conference in Mississippi.

Artists Against Censorship: A Literary Event

Sunday, July 24th, 2011
Aug ’11
25
5:30 pm

Thursday August 25, 5:30 – $5 Cover – Against Censorship
Artists Against Censorship: A Literary Event

“Poet Saw Wei was imprisoned for two and a half years for hiding an anti-government message in a poem. Mao Thawka, also a poet, died while serving 20 years for writing a poem critical of the military. Burmese comedian Zarganar is serving a 35-year sentence for publicly criticizing the government’s failure to assist victims of Cyclone Nargis. These men and those currently in prison are the unsung heroes of Burma. They have been censored and wrongfully imprisoned by their government for speaking the truth.

In 2005, I (Michelle Tooker) visited Yangon, the former capital of Burma. I quickly fell in love with the lush landscapes and gilded pagodas dotting the horizon, but it was the interaction I had with the Burmese people that most inspired me. They are the most resilient and welcoming people I’ve met in any country I’ve visited. As a poet and writer, I value my creative freedom. The people of Burma deserve theirs too.

So join me, Tamara Oakman and members of the Philadelphia Chapter of the U.S. Campaign for Burma in raising awareness on this issue and $3,938—$2 for each political prisoner.

Raffles will be held as well as an open mic. Light refreshments for sale. Proceeds to benefit the U.S. Campaign for Burma.Visit http://tinyurl.com/artistsagainstcensorship for more information. Or contact Michelle Tooker at michellemtooker@yahoo.com or 845-591-8960.

The LA Vanguard, ThisCantBeHappening!, and the Future of Alternative Journalism

Sunday, July 24th, 2011
Aug ’11
18
7:00 pm

Thursday August 18, 7pm – Non- Fiction – Alternative Media
The LA Vanguard, ThisCantBeHappening!, and the Future of Alternative Journalism

The staffs of two remarkable alternative news organizations, the Los Angeles Vanguard of 1976, and ThisCantBeHappening!, a current online alternative newspaper, will come together to tell the stories of these two publications, and discuss the alternative media, past present and future. All those who care about the future of real journalism are invited to attend this forum.

In the spring of 1976 in Los Angeles, the venerable Free Press, one of the nation’s pioneer alternative weekly newspapers, died. Popularly known among its readers as “The Freep,” the paper was converted overnight into a vehicle for massage parlor ads, featuring porn stories, primarily. The last editor of the paper, veteran journalist Tom Thompson, walked out. He, and his law-student wife Dorothy, promptly called a meeting of journalists who had written for the magazine–people like Ron Ridenour, Dave Lindorff and Ben Pleasants, as well as others in the city–and proposed that the group figure out a way to start a new alternative newspaper.  Thus was the Los Angeles Vanguard created.

For over a year, the LA Vanguard, run as a collective, with the editor/writers owning half the publication in return for working for a very meager weekly wage, and a funder, liberal Democratic activist and plumbing supply wholesaler Jim Horowitz, owning the other 50% in return for a $50,000 investment, took the city by storm. The paper, in its short life, exposed rampant violence against citizens by the para-military Los Angeles Police Department, invasive practices of the phone company, Pacific Telephone (often on behalf of police agencies), judicial corruption, and nuclear hazards. The publication won awards in its 14-month run. It also attracted the unwanted attention of the LAPD “red squad”, the Public Disorder Intelligence Division, which dispatched a young female undercover cop to infiltrate the paper in the guise of an aspiring freelance writer, hoping she could uncover the paper’s contacts inside the police and sheriff’s departments.  The LAPD also worked to destroy the paper another way, by applying secret pressure to the paper’s ad sales agency, saying if they did no work to sell ads, but only pretended to be trying, while collecting fees for their non-service, the agency’s owner’s son, busted for drugs, would be let off. This vile campaign ultimately killed the paper, which was folded by the staff, who thought erroneously that it not commercially viable.

Last June, journalist Dave Lindorff, who had been running a mildly successful news blog established in 2004 called ThisCantBeHappening!, decided to convert his one-man project into an online newspaper. He invited several other journalists whom he knew well and respected both as reporters and as human beings, to join him as a collective to found ThisCantBeHappening!, a daily online newspaper of politics and culture.  Two of those journalists, like Dave, are local people–John Grant, known to many for his long activism in the peace and anti-war movement, particularly as a member of Veterans for Peace, and Linn Washington, Jr., a professor of journalism at Temple University and a long-time columnist with the Philadelphia Tribune. Rounding out the collective is New York journalist Charles M. Young, a legendary figure in rock and roll journalism.

In its one year of publication, ThisCantBeHappening! has been read by tens of thousands of people across the US and around the world, and has broken stories no other media have touched, or would have touched. It was the only publication in the US to air the dramatic cell-phone video of Israeli IDF soldiers executing at point blank a young American on the deck of the Gaza aid ship the Mavi Marmara. TCBH! broke the story that Raymond Davis, arrested in Pakistan and charged with murder for the execution slaying of two young men on motorcycles in Lahore, was really a CIA contractor. Two TCBH journalists ran a gun test on a slab of concrete, proving that death-row inmate and journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal could not have shot and killed Philly police officer Daniel Faulkner as described by prosecution witnesses, because there were no divot marks around the body where the missing shots would have had to have landed. Most recently it published an eye-witness report on the secret mass killing and abuse of wild horses by the federal Bureau of Land Management.  The paper has provided the only real coverage of populist sheriff’s candidate Cheri Honkala, who vows to make the department an agent for the people, instead of the courts and the banks.  It also gave readers the only review they’ll ever find of the Pentagon Channel on cable TV.  All this on a budget of $400 for the year!

Meet the staffs of these two extraordinary newspapers, and join in the discussion of the future of alternative journalism. Free drinks and snacks.

Damask Launch Party for their first book Life of Richard

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011
Jul ’11
30
7:30 pm

Saturday, July 30, 7:30pm – Reading

Damask Launch Party for their first book Life of Richard

Featuring: Benjamin Winkler, Jacob Russell, Toby Altman

Benjamin Winkler lives in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he serves as the editor of Splitleaves Press and is a member of The Philadelphia Hive, an interdisciplinary arts collective. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in: decomP, Galatea Resurrects, Otoliths, The Apiary, and Raft Magazine.

Jacob Russell was born in Chicago a long time ago. He arrived in Philly on a Vespa motor scooter in 1964 and never found the exit. He’s been wandering the streets of Philly ever since, searching for Found Things. Spirit Stick says: “Found Things may be given shelter, but lose all their powers if possessed.” Spirit Stick says: “Found Things can never be lost – were you to discard all Things you claim to own – that they be Found & granted their freedom, we might yet save ourselves from self-destruction.” For links to Jacob’s published writing, check out his blog: Jacob Russell’s Barking Dog.

Toby Altman lives well, mostly in Philadelphia with dog and friends. He is the co-founder of Damask press. His poems have recently appeared in Apiary, the Adirondack Review and other cute journals, in print and on the intangible avenues of the internet. He has two chapbooks forthcoming: Asides, from Split Leaves Press, and Life of Richard from Damask Press.

Damask is an independent press. We make hand-made chapbooks and broadsides. We favor spare design and verse in traditional forms.

The Black Women’s Arts Festival presents All People’s Open Mic featuring Wings of Worth

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011
Jul ’11
28
7:00 pm

Thursday, July 28, 7pm – Open Mic
$8/Advance and $10/Door. Tickets: http://allpeoplesopenmic.eventbrite.com/

The Black Women’s Arts Festival presents

All People’s Open Mic featuring Wings of Worth

Come share your writing or spoken word performance while networking with select and surprise featured artists and friends of Philadelphia’s 8th Annual Black Women’s Arts Festival! All respectful persons are welcome to participate. The event will include a wonderful performance by the acclaimed ensemble Wings of Worth:

Wings of Worth endeavors to inspire and uplift women of all ages, hues, socio-economic and cultural backgrounds to be their best “whole” selves.  Founded by Jaz and Adriann “The Pen” Bautista in January 2011, Wings of Worth was established February 6, 2011, upon which the vision, mission and goals for W.O.W. were disseminated to the body of Poets which encompass W.O.W.

“Hanging on Threads of Sanity”, is the first in a series of Spoken Poem-Plays which exposes unspoken often-worn and lived, emotions that scream silently from the depths of she-heroes everywhere, longing to be set free.  These dark life-altering emotions are the threads that both keep us stretched far apart and bind us together……but then when life and circumstance intersect, it is there that we realize all that we truly share.  And it teaches us to re-connect as Sisters and learn to spread our wings for and with each other.

Wings of Worth members are: Naila Mattison, Ebony Malaika Collier, Adriann “The Pen” Bautista, Lina “Alllisss” Baker, Aziza Kinteh, Angel Hogan, Christina “Khrystle” Atkinson, L’Oreal “Elle” Chrisp-Seels, Miracle Brown, Jaz, and Lynn Blue.

For more information visit us on our Face book page, follow us on Twitter as Wings of Worth or visit our website at: http://wingsofworth.wordpress.com

For more information about the Black Women’s Arts Festival, visit http://BWAFphilly.org or email BWAFphilly(at)yahoo.com.

 

National and Local Attacks on our Bodies, Health and Communities

Sunday, April 17th, 2011
Apr ’11
30
5:00 pm

Saturday, April 30, 5pm – Discussion
The Philly Collaborative for Reproductive Justice and Support Kick-Off: Community Discussion and Pre-screening: National and Local Attacks on our Bodies, Health and Communities.


Speakers from: One Love Movement, Positive Women’s Network, Planned Parenthood, Philadelphia Women’s Center, and more.

Art from the Heart Fundraiser Art Show

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011
Feb ’11
4
7:00 pm

Friday, February 4, 7pm – $10 admission, refreshments included – Multi-media

Art from the Heart Fundraiser Art Show
Art from the Heart is an upcoming gallery that will feature art from the following non-profit agencies: Project H.O.M.E, Overbrook School for the Blind, Warrior Writers and ActionAIDS. We hope to create a venue where the Philadelphia community can learn and receive inspiration from the population’s distinct perspective. Please join us for a night of art, music and inspiration! Artists from the participating agencies will perform music, poetry, dance and more to raise money for the upcoming Art from the Heart Gallery!
All proceeds go towards the operating costs of the gallery. No profits will be made!

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