Tuesday, January 26, 2016

BAMBD Media Team Drafted


Black artists gather at Frank Ogawa/Oscar Grant Plaza in front of Oakland City Hall, prior to City Council vote that established the Black Arts Movement Business District, January 12, 2016.
Front: Khalid Waajid; Amir Aziz, Duane Deterville, Judy Juanita, Eric Arnold, Tureada Mikell, Marvin X, Tarika Lewis, DeMar-con Gibson, Blystk Kmba, Crsna Cox, Jaenal Peterson, Jahaninh Omi Bahari, Janeah Taylor, Yancie Taylor, Tracy Mitchell, Ron Linzie, Dennis X, Wanda Ravernell
photo Adam Turner

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Graphics by Blystk Kmba

Black Bird Press News & Review: Black Power Babies Rock Philly
 Marvin X in Philly, interviewed by WURD Radio

The following persons have been drafted to establish the BAMBD Media Team. The team will be in charge of media matters, e.g., press releases, interviews, feature stories, promotional materials. BAM ancestor Amiri Baraka said we must be prepared to shoot down any negative stories about BAMBD that are not factual but only part of the disinformation campaign by you know who. Baraka said we have the intelligence to immediately counter-act  and smash any lies and distortions spread by you know who and the playa haters, jealous and envious Negroes, yes, those with the crabs in the barrel mentality.

Writers:
Dr. Ayodele Nzinga
Aries Jordan
Eric Arnold
Duane Deterville
Aquella Lewis
Wanda Sabir
Ishmael Reed
Askia Toure
Nefertiti Jackmon

Photographers/videographers
Adam Turner
Gene Hazzard
Kamau Amen Ra
Ken Johnson
Malaika Kambon
Harrison Chastain
Khalid Waajib
Amir Aziz

Painters, graphic artists:
Adam Turner
Randolph Belle
Muhammad Kareem
Mical Free

Blystk Kmba
James Gayles
Malik Seneferu
Refa One
Emory Douglas
Kalamu Cache'
Claude Clark
Joyce Gordon


Graphic design by Adam Turner

h
Black Arts Movement Poets Choir and Arkestra
Photo collage by Adam Turner

Black Arts Movement Tentative Program for 50th Anniversary Celebration ...

Art by James Gayles

l


Graphics by Mical Free, photo Kamau Amen Ra


Photo by Gene Hazzard

 BAM co-founder Amiri Baraka
Art by Emory
 Photo by Ken Johnson

Graphic art by Emory 

 Negro es bello/Black is Beautiful
Art by BAM Ancestor Elizabeth Catlett Mora


Saturday, January 23, 2016

Toward the BAM Business District National Advisory Board (Proposed, unconfirmed)



The following persons are requested to participate on the Black Arts Movement Business District National Advisory Board:




Danny Glover
Delroy Lindo
Sonia Sanchez
Nikki Giovanni
Mrs. Amina Baraka
Mayor Ras Baraka
Amiri Baraka, Jr.
Askia Toure
Woody King
The Last Poets
Felipe Luciano
David Murray
Marshall Allen
Danny Thompson
David Boykin
Haki Madhubuti
Toni Morrison
Alice Walker
Angela Davis
Muhammad Ahmad
John Burris
Gus Newport
Walter Riley
Eleanor Mason
Dezie Woods Jones
Maxine Ussery
Ruth Beckford
Ellendar Barnes
Dr. Mona Scott
Dr. Nathan Hare
Ishmael Reed
Al Young
Fahizah Alim
Kalamu Ya Salaam
Eugene Redman
Dr. Cornel West





Chicago's David Boykin produced conference on BAM Master Sun Ra at University of Chicago.
BAM Master's Marvin X, Marshall Allen and Danny Thompson of Sun Ra's Arkestra particpated,
May 22, 2015.

 The Black Dialogue Magazine brothers who visited the Soledad Prison Black Culture Club, chaired by Eldridge Cleaver and Alprintice Bunchy Carter, 1966. This club was the beginning of the American prison movement. Black Dialogue Magazine was edited by students in the BSU at San Francisco (most of the above). FYI, the Bay Area played a critical role in radical publications of the BAM National Movement, sister of the Black Power Movement (Larry Neal). While the East Coast is credited with founding BAM, critical journals of BAM were produced in the Bay Area: Soulbook Magazine (Merritt College), Black Dialogue, Journal of Black Poetry (San Francisco State College/University and community), Black Scholar Magazine, founded by Dr. Nathan Hare, edited by Robert Chrisman. There were the critical BAM journals, along with Liberator (New York City) and Negro Digest/Black World (Chicago). Prior to BAM journals was Umbra, published in NYC.

 BAM/Black Power freedom fighters Angela Davis, Marvin X, Sonia Sanchez

 Tarika Lewis, artistic freedom fighter, first female member of the Black Panther Party; Fred Hampton, Jr., Black Panther Cub, BAM Elder Marvin X, BAM/Black Power Babies Ras Ceylon and Alia
 BAM Baby Wanda Sabir. Her parents read to her Marvin X's classic Fable of the Black Bird.
Wanda is a Professor at College of Alameda and writer for the Bayview Newspaper, SF.

Promo from Stanley Nelson documentary film Black Panthers, Vanguard of the Revolution
BAM poet Marvin X appears in film.



Bay Area artists: Dewey Crumpler, painter, Author Monroe, painter, Ishmael Reed, author, Conyus, poet, Marvin X poet/organizer, Al Young, California poet laureate emeritus 
photo Tennessee Reed

 Black Arts Movement Poets Choir and Arkestra, University of California, Merced, 2014.
The BAM 50th Anniversary Celebration produced by Kim McMillan and Marvin X

 

Juan Herrera Felipe, member of original  BAM Poets Choir and Arkestra formed at University of California, Merced, 2014. Juan is now United States of America Poet Laureate 

 The Black Arts Movement Poets Choir and Arkestra at the Malcolm X Jazz/Art Festival, Oakland Ca, 2014
collage photo Adam Turner, Post News Group


Marvin X, daughter Muhammida el Muhajir, Dr. Julia Hare, Nisa Ra (Mother of Muhammida, former wife of Marvin X, still one of his best friends; Dr. Nathan Hare. Marvin adopted Julia and Nathan as his aunt and uncle. Dr. Julia Hare said, "When Marvin X calls you, it's like God calling. When he says jump, you say how high?" Marvin X says, "Oh, let us assist Dr. Nathan Hare in caring for his wife of 58 years. Oh, community, go visit them or send them a generous donation. They need your help at this hour as I write."
BAM artists Zena Allen, Marvin X, Tarika Lewis and Linda Johnson, one of our greatest choreographers. Marvin says, "I've worked with many Bay Area dancers, choreographers. As a child I adored Ruth Beckford who taught at New Century Rec Center in West Oakland when I was a child.
At San Francisco State College/University, I experienced Nontizi Cayou, worked with her. Then Raymond Sawyer, Ed Mock, Debra Vaughn, Suzzette Celeste, Raynetta Rayzetta (no one interpreted my poetry better than Raynetta and Suzzette Celeste). But I can't exclude Debra Vaughn and Traci Bartlow.



Ishmael Reed's classic study of Muhammad Ali. I appreciate Ishmael for allowing me to say what I wanted to say about my NOI brother and fellow traveler. As per the war in Vietnam, Ali and I were the best known NOI members who refused to fight in Vietnam. I endured exile, jail and Federal prison for my beliefs. Ali suffered fighting in the prime of his life as World Heavyweight  Champion.

Stanley Nelson, director of the film Black Panthers, Vanguard of the Revolution, Marvin X and Fred Hampton, Jr., at the screening of film at San Francisco International Film Festival. Fred Hampton was featured in the film as a baby. He was in the womb of his mother when the pigs killed his father while he lay in bed with his pregnant mother. The Chicago police admitted they attacked the BPP house to murder Black Panthers, especially after receiving information from a snitching ass nigguh.

Even as I write here in Oakland CA, even as the Oakland City Council just approved the Black Arts Movement Business District along the 14th Street corridor downtown, the rats are out and about. Even as we took the photo shoot before the City Council vote on the BAMBD, the rats were about, not only were they in the grass outside City Hall as many artists noticed, but they found their way into the group photo, one need only look at the last row on the left to see the rats. We had people on the East Coast check out the pic and they agreed they saw the rats in the pic.


Friday, January 22, 2016

Nigger for Life, poems by Dr. Neal Hall, MD



Nigger For Life Book Awards:
  • 2015 Pacific Rim Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2015 Amsterdam Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2015 Greater Southeast Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2014 Florida Books Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 GRAND PRIZE WINNER – The Do-It-Yourself Book Awards
  • 2013 London Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 The Great Midwest Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 Southern California Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 Do-It-Yourself Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 Finalist: International Book Awards by USA Book News
  • 2013 San Francisco Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 Paris Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 National Beverly Hills Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 Great Northwest Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 Great Southwest Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2013 GRAND PRIZE WINNER – Los Angeles Book Awards – The First Poet to Ever Win The L.A. Grand Prize
  • 2013 Los Angeles Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2012 New England Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2012 New York Book Awards – 1st Place, Poetry
  • 2012 Hollywood Book Awards – Runner Up, Poetry
  • 2012 Poetry Contest Winner, Ubud Writers & Readers International Festival, Bali, Indonesia
  • Named Conversation Magazine’s 2012 Top 10 Best Poetry Books
  • National Black Authors Tour’s Distinguished Honor Award

City of Oakland downtown Plan meeting


City of Oakland Banner
Connect
Please join us to consider policy and design options to make Downtown Oakland the thriving, diverse, safe and equitable neighborhood that Oaklanders want to see at their city’s core. Based on the community’s feedback from two months of extensive public conversations, the City will be presenting ideas for solutions in a specific plan for Downtown to help meet the community’s needs, including:
  • Policies and programs to protect and support artists, small businesses, and residents at all income levels, including options to develop funds needed to meet these needs
  • Plans to encourage development that will fill in the gaps in our neighborhoods with living-wage jobs, new housing, new retail space and community benefits
  • Designs for public streets and gathering places that welcome and connect all residents, with a focus on transit-accessible public spaces that are safe for bicyclists and pedestrians of all ages
An open house will follow the presentation, where you can take a closer look at the options, offer new ideas and revisions, and talk with the designers, staff, and other community members.
Monday, February 1, 2016, 6:00 to 8:30 pm
Malonga Casquelourd Center for the Arts, 1428 Alice Street
Schedule
6:00 pm: Arrival & Reception
6:30 pm: Presentation
7:30 pm: Open House
Play
To experience some of the future possibilities firsthand, come to Frank Ogawa Plaza from February 4th through 6th for the Our City: Oakland Public Design Fair. The Plaza will be transformed into a place for people of all ages to play in new ways. Ten locally-built public design projects will premiere at the Fair, inviting residents and visitors alike to reimagine the future of our public space.
Festivities start on Friday, February 4th at a kickoff celebration with food, drinks and PLAY at the Museum of Children’s Art (1625 Clay Street) from 6:00 to 9:00 pm. Visit the Our City: Oakland website for details.
Heal
The City of Oakland is committed to advancing policy and institutional change to address structural inequality throughout Oakland. To support concrete steps toward this goal the Planning Department is issuing a Request for Proposals (RFP) to develop a social equity strategy that will guide this and future specific plans. The strategy would ensure that policies are developed to address the physical environment and economic conditions for all people, including those with the fewest resources, through the promotion of participatory engagement and positive social change.
Please forward this email and the link to the RFP to any organizations and consultants who are leaders in social equity policy, planning and participation: RFP for Oakland Social Equity Strategy.
Please feel free to forward this email or repost the Facebook event link to the February 1st meeting for your friends, neighbors and coworkers who care about their city: Community Meeting Facebook Event. For more information on Plan Downtown, please visit www.oaklandnet.com/plandowntownoakland.
We hope to see you on Monday, February 1st!

Marvin X invited to Visioning Session at Oakland's Flight Deck Theatre


       


 VIP hour Accelerator 2016

Art at the Center of Downtown’s Public Life: A Creative Visioning Session Oakland is changing. We all know it. Buildings are going up, businesses are opening, new people are coming in, and some folks who have been here for a long time are getting pushed out. There’s a sense of opportunity and a sense of fear. Who will get a share of the new prosperity? In Oakland, like in so many urban areas, artists have been central in making the place desirable - so often, people reference diversity and arts & culture when they talk about why they love Oakland. But as new money comes in and rents rise, artists and arts organizations are often some of the first to be displaced. At this moment when so much is changing for Oakland, and when the city is creating a new Downtown Specific Plan, how can we make sure that the arts remain at the center of public life in Oakland, and that they continue to grow in ways that are equitable and rooted in Oakland’s rich culture and history?


As the opener to The Flight Deck’s annual Accelerator event on February 6th, we are inviting our guests to join in a visioning session on the future of the arts in Downtown
Oakland. Experts in various fields will provide context and give their perspective on
these issues, and then participants will work in groups to creatively develop a vision for
placing the arts at the center of public life in Downtown Oakland’s changing landscape.
The process will marry elements of ensemble theater techniques and urban planning
design charettes. This session will serve as a pilot - an experiment in process that could
be duplicated in other contexts if it is effective.
Time: 5-6pm
Saturday, February 6, 2016
Facilitator: Anna Shneiderman, Executive Director, Ragged Wing Ensemble & The Flight
Deck
Panelists:
1. Robert Ogilvie, Executive Director, SPUR Oakland (confirmed)
2. Richard Weinstein, Owner, Weinstein Local & Citrine Advisors Real Estate
(confirmed)
3. Lindsay Krumbein, Executive Artistic Director, Gritty City Repertory Youth
Theatre (confirmed)
4. Someone from the city - Libby Schaaf, Tamika Moss or who?
5. A local artist/advocate – Marvin X? Anyka Barber?

Plan:
1. As the participants enter, they are assigned a group number.
2. The facilitator introduces the topic, process and panelists.
3. Each panelist gives a 3-minute intro to their perspective on the topic and any
relevant background and context from their field.
4. The participants split into groups. Each group includes one panelist and onefacilitator. The groups address their question by creating a simple artistic product. 
5. We return to the full group and each group presents their piece.
6. Each panelist has 1 minute to synthesize take-aways, or things they will add to the next steps of their work as a result of the session.
7. Facilitator closes out the session. 

Questions for groups to address:
  • 1. How can city government best support Oakland artists? (City person)
    2. How can art be incorporated into street-scapes, public spaces and new
    developments? (Robert)
    3. How do we make sure that the artists and arts organizations who have made
    Oakland so unique and desirable are able to stay as new residents, businesses and
    capital move in and rents rise? (artist/advocate)
    4. How can the Arts community and the Business community collaborate to best
    serve the public? (Richard)
    5. How can The Flight Deck best serve the public of Oakland? (Lindsay)
    Prompt for each group:
    Talk, draw, sing, move. Come up with some ideas and then make a simple artistic
    product that represents them.
    Create a product that:
    includes a minimal amount of text that gets to the essence of your idea (spoken or
    written)
    includes a visual element
    includes a performance element - movement or music
    is no longer than 1 minute
    includes everyone in the group in some way
    the form of the piece reflects the content of the ideas
    Materials available:
    large paper
    markers, colored pencils, etc.
    tape & glue
    other simple craft supplies

Parable of Black Man and Block Man & Parable of the Rats

When a fool is told a parable, it's meaning must be explained to him.--African proverb


You got black man and block man.

Watch out for block man!

--Sun Ra


There was a black man and a block man, both were black men, but block man had a big block head. He used to stand at the crossroads waiting for black man to come through so he could block him from going in any direction. If black man tried to go east, west, north or south, the playa hatin, jealous, envious block man would cause black man to either stop, stumble or fall.


Sometimes black man would purposely fall because he knew the African proverb that to stumble or fall is only to go forward faster. So after being blocked at one turn, he would fake a fall and go forward on his journey up the hill.

Of course block man would be waiting for him at a pass up the hill and again try to block black man from going farther. But black man, being athletic, was able to leap to the side and gracefully go pass block man.

And even though block man had a lot of friends who were blockheads too, black man had friends in the sun, moon and stars who watched out for him.

Black man had friends in the wind, seas, rivers, trees and all over the earth. So block man didn't have a chance with his evil scheme to block black man. All black man had to do was flow in the flow and make sure he wasn't swimming against the current of the universe, for in the counter flow the block men were waiting patiently for him, sharpening their knives, ready to remove the heart and soul of black man.

So black man planned and block man planned, but black man was the best planner. As long as his mind remained clean and sober, he could see block man coming a mile way.

Parable of the Rats by Marvin X



The rats all have the same gait: they scurry about, back broken by an abundance of lies, half-truths and disinformation, defamation and other tactics of rat behavior. Even their facial expressions have a rat like appearance, so you can see them coming a mile away. You can smell a funky rat. We suspect the two legged variety even has a tail hidden inside their pants or underneath their dresses, yes, there are rats of every gender, every color, class. Some are sewer rats, some are wharf rats, some are subway rats, church rats, house rats. But their behavior is the same. They are on the lower level of humankind, these two legged rats. They can do nothing right. They cannot give justice even with the scale in view while they weigh goods. They will lie while you look at them playing with the scale. They will try to convince you the scale doesn't work while it is their minds that have not evolved to work on the human level.

There is only one thing to do with such rats: set a trap for them or feed them poison cheese and watch them puke and vomit until they die. Better yet, let the cat catch their asses. It is beautiful watching the cat catch a rat, seeing how still the cat will become while stalking his prey. But the cat will lie in wait for the rat as long as it takes, never moving, never batting his eye. And then he leaps upon his prey and devours him. It is a beautiful sight when when the cat and rat game reaches the climax and ends with the consumption of the rat by the cat.
--Marvin X
7/15/15 







Marvin X is known variously as El Muhajir (the migrant), Plato Negro, Rumi, Jeremiah. His outdoor classroom is at 14th and Broadway, downtown Oakland. Ishmael Reed says, "If you want to learn about motivation and inspiration, don't spend all that money going to workshops and seminars, just go stand at 14th and Broadway and watch Marvin X work. He's Plato teaching on the streets of Oakland!"

Oakland Post on BAM Business District