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Showing posts from April, 2021

The People's Kitchen Collective

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 People's kitchen's collective is a political project based in Oakland founded by  co-founders Sita Kuratomi Bhaumik, Jocelyn Jackson, and Saqib Keval. This project implements art, food, and activism in its practice, somewhere in the center of the three , not quite belonging in just one of them. This project is about the experiences of people of color. People's Kitchen Collective believes in radical hospitality. The recipes they use belonged to their elders and ancestors, to which they passed down and share with the community. They say that their recipes dismantle white supremacy, the rules at the dinner table being justice, equity, and overall freedom. Everyone deserves to be free, no matter the color of their skin and no matter their ethnic background. Everyone deserves to be treated equally.   I think it is a very cool event that I would love to participate in one day! 

Dave Thomas

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 Dave Thomas is a storyboard artist who has worked on shows such as El Tigre, The Fairly Odd Parents, Wander Over Yonder and more. Warner Bros cartoons had inspired him to become interested in animation. His big break was when he got an internship for Pixar, the start of his career. He has come across obstacles in his career of animation and story boarding, but he has never let that bring him down. Instead, he asks himself or those who are on another level how he could get better, and he makes sure that he makes those necessary changes for improvement. I believe a mindset like that is truly inspiring. A strong mindset to be able to improve what you can change, and to listen to criticism and take it into consideration. I've actually watched a few of the shows he's worked on myself, especially El Tigre and the Fairly Odd Parents. El Tigre was one of my favorite cartoons growing up, and to hear someone who has worked on it speak about their career is extra cool to me.

Chelsea Thompto

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  Chelsea Thompto is a transdisciplinary artist and educator. Her artwork is heavily revolved around her life as a transgender woman, working with a variety of media that includes video, computer code, digital fabrication, writing, photography, printmaking, and even bookbinding.  One project she is currently working on is an artist book series called Transaction , which will contain the works of contemporary trans artists, scholars, and activists. The mission of this book series is is to provide a platform for trans experience. Landmarks, 2021 (Ongoing) One of her artworks that she's done in the past is called Landmarks , which shows the ways artificial intelligence (AI) misgenders trans bodies due to the facial recognition. As technology becomes more prevalent in our daily lives, it is important for something like an AI to be able to recognize transgender bodies and recognize them as they're supposed to, and not misgender them.  Her entire video portfolio of her artworks can b

Surrealism and the Black Dahlia

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 Surrealism was a 20th-century movement that looked to release the creative potential of the unconscious mind, resulting in very weird and bizarre imagery. It developed in the aftermath of World War I in Europe and has been around even in modern times ever since. Surrealism has even been linked to a famous murder dubbed the Black Dahlia, sparking much speculation and conspiracies about this mystery that still is unsolved to this day. Elizabeth Short Considering some surrealist artists fascination with the art of crime, surrealism art has been linked to the infamous Black Dahlia murder. The Black Dahlia was the murder of a woman named Elizabeth Short on January 15, 1947, whose corpse was mutilated and severed at the waist to be left in the Leimert Park neighborhood of Los Angeles. The murder was said to have been inspired by some of Man Ray’s pieces of surrealist art including the Minotaur and Observatory Time: The Lovers . Minotaur, Man Ray, Date: 1934 Observatory Time: The Lovers, 19