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“You Don’t Know My Name” by Alicia Keys | Choreography by Baiba Klints
ft. Daniel Asamoah & Ken Vaega
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This Game We Play -Â Franck Bohbot
Franck Bohbot is a french photographer and filmmaker, who lives and works in New York. He is a documentarian with an eye for the theatrical who found his way to photography by way of cinema. Although he turned his focus fully to photography in 2008, beginning his career as a unit still photographer on short film sets, the formal and aesthetic influences of the cinematographic form unsurprisingly continue to underlie his present work. Bohbot’s photographic work inhabits a space between reality and fantasy, documenting and storytelling, every frame—to borrow a phrase from Nan Goldin—like a still from a nonexistent film. - from his website
Instagram: @crossconnectmag
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The Body Shapes of the World’s Best Athletes Compared Side By Side
All different shapes and sizes… Every single one of these athletes is a certified bad-ass.
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The Broken Column, Frida Kahlo
Medium: oil,masonite
https://www.wikiart.org/en/frida-kahlo/the-broken-column-1944
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Que es un blog de Frida Kahlo sin Diego Rivera
•"Diego era todo: mi niño, mi amor, mi universo" -Frida Kahlo
* “Yo me he dado cuenta que lo más maravilloso que me ha pasado en mi vida ha sido mi amor por Frida” - Diego Rivera en 1954 por la muerte de Frida Kahlo
Its not a Frida Kahlo blog without Diego Rivera
* “Diego was my everything: my child, my lover, my universe.”- Frida Kahlo
* “ July 13, 1954 was the most tragic day of my life. I had lost my beloved Frida forever. To late now I realized that the most wonderful part of my life had been my love for Frida.” - Diego Rivera
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The Love Embrace of the Universe, the Earth, Myself, Diego and Senor Xolotl
1949
Frida KahloÂ
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Frida Kahlo’s self-portrait “Diego En Mis Pensamientos” (Diego On My Mind).
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It’s fascinating looking at representations of Africans in Chinese CCP propaganda from the 60s and early 70s. During this time period, China saw itself standing in solidarity in a class struggle with POC in Africa, Asia and Latin America against white-led American and European imperialism. The CCP also saw itself as having led a revolution which could be modeled by the peoples of these nations. Representations of Africa in the propaganda of this era therefore show tremendous camaraderie and brotherhood, presenting a united front against Western imperialism and colonization.
At the same time, though, these images are also steeped in a deep sense of racialized paternalism, which the last image, “Saviour” speaks tremendously to as well. This was due in part to the fact that the CCP’s revolution came earlier and was therefore the model revolution which they were “teaching” to Africans, but it also played directly upon antiblack stereotypes of African people as explicitly primitive (see the poster in which the “silver needle of friendship” is passed) and requiring the stewardship of the Chinese CCP in their march toward freedom in their own countries. The paternalism evident in the “friendship” is clear and plays into these racist, demeaning tropes, raising up a Chinese (rather than white) savior for African peoples in the face of Mao ZeDong.
These images are therefore interesting in the ways they evoke a sense of global POC solidarity against white-led imperialist forces from America and Europe, portray African leaders in a positive and noble light, generally work to show brotherhood between Chinese and African peoples, but then also plays to racist tropes like the “noble savage” trope and positions Africans and other POC in the developing world in solidarity but ultimately under Chinese CCP stewardship with a Chinese savior (Mao ZeDong) who “gets” their struggle, rather than a white one— but still a demeaning, paternalistic savior nonetheless.
Very interesting images to examine, especially for those interested in the history of relationships between Africans and Chinese people, and all of this come courtesy of chineseposters.net’s amazing article “Foreign Friends: African Friends.”
(h/t chineseposters)Â
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When Afromythology meets Contemporary Art ✊🏿 (📸: @_xst) #BlackArt #BlackOwned
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Anok Yai by photographed photographed By Mert Alas and Marcus Piggot, British Vogue September 2018.Â
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