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"The Fragmented Nature of Latinidad"
By The Editors
We're ecstatic to see Monique Quintana's review of our founder Christine Sloan Stoddard's book, Water for the Cactus Woman, in Luna Luna Magazine today. Here's how it begins:
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Happy 14th, Insight!
By The Editors
Brrr!! Are you hibernating? It's time to get out of the house! Insight Magazine, run by Fokus, the NYC-based non-profit empowering 18-29 year-olds through creativity, is having a party in Brooklyn on January 26th. This publication, which we recently mentioned in our feature on Cheryl Lee Bowers, is turning 14 years old. Here's an excerpt from Fokus's email invite:
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Companies' Ethics Shouldn't Be My Burden
By M. Alouette
In some ways, I live large. Those tend to be the ways that don't cost money. In most other ways—the ways that involve services and material goods—my life is much humbler. I am middle class and earn the median income for my area, which is predominantly lower-middle class in a very expensive city. I have no debt in large part because I live within my means. I'm also lucky to be in relatively good health and to have no serious accidents or catastrophes. Or least nothing recently. Everything really bad is far enough in the past that I've been able to re-build and move on. Again, I'm lucky. But I've made some of my own luck; with that luck comes guilt. I'm frugal in most realms and I prioritize my spending, which means I cannot always buy the most ethical products. To have control over my financial security, I buy all of my cosmetics and toiletries at the dollar store. I don't deny myself my self-care rituals. I just groom and primp on the cheap. If I regularly bought department store, organic store, and salon brands, I would not have the level of financial security that I have now. I'd probably have credit card debt. After all, the average U.S. household has almost $7,000 worth of credit card debt. That could just as easily be me. With that debt, I couldn't honor my civic duties to the extent I do now.
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Latinx Art in Allentown
By The Editors
We're always hearing about rad art events in Philly and Pittsburgh, so it's encouraging to hear when other parts of Pennsylvania have their own exciting happenings. One on our radar right now is "Tear It Down," an art exhibition featuring Latinx artists at The Alternative Gallery in Allentown. That includes our previously featured painter/photographer Helen Sánchez Stoddard. Here's the official language describing the gallery's open house for the show on January 31st:
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Lobbying ‘Day of Action’ Brings Hundreds to Richmond
RICHMOND, Virginia — Hundreds of political activists from across Virginia gathered in Richmond on Monday to lobby in favor of driving rights for immigrants, a higher minimum wage and voting rights for felons.
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Glorious Luna
By The Editors
We hope you spent last night gazing at (or at least glimpsing) the Super Blood Wolf Moon! Writer and artist Nicole Clatterbuck, who lives in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley region, was kind enough to let us run a few of her photos of the eclipse. She says, "Yeah, I was out there....from the ascending until about 1:45 a.m. when I was no longer sure whether or not I had fingers. I wish I'd had a bigger lens, but no matter...it was such a beautiful experience regardless! I mean was [it] glorious or what!?" Yes, yes, it was!
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Because Nightmare Debt Doesn't Quit
By M. Alouette
If you never heard it anywhere else, you heard it here: Do not go into debt for your M.F.A. It doesn't matter if you're going for writing, visual art, or film. Don't do it. I'm not saying don't go. I'm just saying that you should do yourself a HUGE favor in a society that doesn't want you to act in your best interest. Realistically, you will probably never make enough money to pay back those loans anytime soon. Ensuring your own financial security and maintaining control over your finances is an essential form of self-care. We need money for just about everything in the United States. Not even water is free. If you really, really, really want your M.F.A., that's fine, that's great. But do it without acquiring debt. Again: Don't. Go. Into. Debt. For. An. M.F.A. Otherwise that debt will haunt you for the rest of your life. And it's not a cool supernatural experience; it's just an anxiety-inducing one. You will have much more room for magic and freedom in your life after your M.F.A. if you don't rack up debt.
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Event Promotes Racial Reconciliation on Virginia’s 400th Anniversary
RICHMOND, Virginia — With art, music, dance and spoken word, a national organization that fights injustice is holding a two-day event in Richmond to reflect on the history of slavery in Virginia and to promote racial reconciliation.
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The Unheard Voice
Editors' note: The following is an essay that stemmed from an email Q&A with the Indian artist Kripa Radhakrishnan, who is now a graduate student in New York City.
The Unheard Voice is a collaboration between 3D sculpture and performance art. The creative process included the development of a concept, visual imagery, and performance. I have formal training in Indian Classical Dance that contributes to my sense of a narrative approach of storytelling in my painting, sculpture and performance art. That training informs my decision-making in the positioning of the figures in my works. Using that vocabulary, I narrate the stories I share through figurative drawings, colors, found materials, proverbs, and poems. I make artworks which eliminate caste, religion and cultural identity in the physical appearances of the figures in my art. The sounds that I generate from my vocal cords, my dramatic body movements with highly emotional facial expressions, and the variety of found materials I incorporate all work together to create dramatic ambiance in this piece. I have incorporated found materials and ghungroo (a musical anklet tied to the feet of classical Indian dancers) in my performances. My interdisciplinary works strive to evoke an emotion or thought process connected to themes of women’s oppression and survival. The Unheard Voice suggests new visual possibilities when combined with dance.
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News: Super Blood Wolf Moon 2019 & Steven John Fuchs' Illustration of the 2000 Lunar Eclipse1/20/2019 The Super Blood Moon Is Real!
By The Editors
It sounds fake—and honestly like the perfect start of a novel—but there's going to be a Super Blood Wolf Moon tonight! This will be the only total lunar eclipse we will get all year. Only those in North and South America can enjoy the full effect. So why the name? Per NASA: "super' because the Moon will be closest to Earth in its orbit during the full moon (more on supermoons here) and “blood" because the total lunar eclipse will turn the Moon a reddish hue." The beginning of the total lunar eclipse will occur at 11:41 p.m. EST, with the most dramatic moment set for 12:12 a.m. EST.
In honor of tonight's spectacular event, we wanted to bring you an illustration by artist Steven John Fuchs of Arlington, Virginia. The illustration depicts the artist and his son David observing the lunar eclipse in 2000. Learn more about Fuchs at StevenJohnFuchs.com and check out his science fiction graphic novel Soyuz Blue. Now go out and savor that Super Blood Wolf Moon! |
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