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#black 365
artistintherough · 2 months
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Stokely Carmichael.
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blackexcellence · 10 months
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Happy Juneteenth Tumblr✊🏿✊🏾✊🏽✊🏼
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blackisdivine · 3 months
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BLACK LIVES MATTER ❤
Artwork source: https://www.instagram.com/kenslerb/?img_index=1
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staff · 1 year
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tumblr tuesday: Black excellence in art
Oh, hi, sorry, what's that? Bountiful amounts of beautiful art? By ridiculously talented Black artists? Yes, please. 
Sometimes, you just need to know where to go. In this case, that place is #Black artists on Tumblr. Click through to feast your eyes on more fodder and celebrate your wonderful local artists.
Are you a Black artist or creative on Tumblr? Join in by tagging your art #BlackExcellence365, and you might be in for a nice surprise!
@jonathansoren:
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@dansoloart:
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@lucidlymelanated:
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@ndizzot:
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@magz:
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@artworkbyrese:
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@eaudera:
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@piinkiish-arts:
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@british215:
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@renlo:
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@nyanzad:
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@brianelstak:
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@bazzarhippie:
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@statikkling:
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@lalasdreambox:
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@lunaeregia:
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ackee · 1 year
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birdie has a golf club thats like a broomstick :0] so she can get a…. birds eye view teehee
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cyarsk52-20 · 11 months
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todayontumblr · 3 months
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Thursday, February 1.
Black History Month 2024.
Get ready to immerse yourself in a month-long celebration of Black joy, Black excellence, and Black art. Following the Association for the Study of African American Life and History's announcement that the theme for Black History Month 2024 is "African Americans and the Arts," we're thrilled to shine a spotlight on Black creators of all stripes right here on Tumblr.
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alwaysbewoke · 3 months
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dreams-in-blk · 10 months
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Ari Lennox
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alleannaharris · 1 year
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Today's Black History Month illustration is of Josephine Baker. She was a world famous entertainer, WWII spy, and activist.
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Freda Josephine McDonald was born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1906. Her parents were both vaudeville performers, but Baker would have to take on odd jobs to help support her family.
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At the age of 15, she ran off and joined a dance troupe from Philadelphia. She also got married, took her husband’s last name, dropped her first name and started going by the name Josephine Baker. After acting and dancing in musicals, she moved to New York City and was soon performing at the Plantation Club where she became a crowd favorite.
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In 1925, Baker went to Paris to dance at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in La Revue Nègre. When the Revue closed, she was given her own show and her career skyrocketed.
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She was the first Black woman to star in a motion picture and one of the first Black entertainers to achieve acclaim on screen and stage.
Baker became a citizen of France in 1937. When the Germans occupied France during WWII, she worked with the Red Cross and the French Resistance by transporting confidential information by writing with invisible ink on her sheet music. She was awarded the Croix de Guerre and the Legion of Honor with the rosette of the Résistance.
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Baker traveled many times to the US to participate in the civil rights movement. She was the only woman who spoke at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1968.
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Her time at home forced her to confront segregation and discrimination that she didn’t experience overseas. She often refused to perform for segregated audiences and club owners were forced to integrate for her shows.
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She continued to perform until her death in 1975, during the celebration of the 50th anniversary of her Paris debut.
I’ll be back on Monday with the last illustration and story!
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artistintherough · 3 months
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Black History Month. MLK quote’s your high school/elementary teacher won’t or can’t teach you.
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blackexcellence · 1 year
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Art by @lehuckbadu
African Hair Threading
Hair Threading has been part of the Black hair scene for many generations. It consists of wrapping sectioned hair in thread. This method of wrapping the hair in thread strengthens the hair without excessive manipulation, which is beneficial for your strands. Not only does the style strengthen the hair, but it also promotes growth.
The style comes from Sub-Saharan African countries and grew its popularity in West Africa, particularly, South Nigeria. Learn more here
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Art by Izzakko via @blacklacerabbit
Bantu Knots and Hi-Top Fades
The Zulu people of southern Africa originated Bantu knots, a hairstyle where the hair is sectioned off, twisted, and wrapped in such a way that the hair stacks upon itself to form a spiraled knot (Source). Learn the history of Bantu Knots
The hi-top fade or flattop originated in the U.S. military around the ‘40s and ‘50s. By the mid-eighties, Black barbers began to reimagine the hairstyle, and due to its resemblance to Queen Nefertiti’s Empress headpiece, some speculated the hairstyle's origin. The hairstyle grew as a trend when worn by the like of Grace Jones, Doug E. Fresh, and Salt-N-Peppa.
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Art by LaQuecya Allen via @nappy-by-nature
Afro
As far as hairstyles go, there's nothing Blacker than the Afro. In the 1960s, after decades of subjecting themselves to European beauty standards, Black folks decided to take back their hair. This newfound self-acceptance was widely known as the Black Is Beautiful movement, which sprang from the Black Power movement. The 'fro was rocked by Angela Davis, Huey P. Newton, and Jesse Jackson while fighting oppression; the hairstyle quickly emerged as a symbol of Black beauty, liberation, and pride.
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Remember: tag your Black hair art with #BlackExcellence365 for a chance to be featured!
And keep your eyes out for next month's theme... 👀
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blackisdivine · 3 months
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verum-artifex · 10 months
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Happy Juneteeth
Juneteenth, a testament to resilience and might, A beacon of freedom, shining ever so bright. We remember the past, embrace the present with glee, For in unity we find strength, forever we'll be free.
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ackee · 1 year
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as you see from this picture, i have to talk about my ocs every day lest they escape my mind anyway and cause havoc‼️
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tredawakandan · 8 months
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Respect to Dick Gregory for being the pivotal figure that he was but I gotta disagree with this logic that him and many others still use within our community.. The idea that a natural phenomenon like a hurricane was made via the deaths of our people that were lost and traded this way.. Of course I love metaphysics and occult info but not in a case like this. The word hurricane for one comes from an indigenous word that displays the concept of a hurricane as a god Huracan. Not only that but many indigenous islanders and Central/South Americans already could predict Hurricanes by the time colonizers would meet them.. I say that to say that's not possible for a event like the slave trade to have created a annual event like that when it was already knowledge shared amongst the indigenous people. Lastly we gotta remember that the transatlantic slave started over here. Jack D Forbes book 📚 talks about this amongst other writings and artworks from various author... Ultimately you gotta know that Columbus shipped indians from the islands back to Europe before any slaves would even come over here.. Hopefully you learned something useful today 👌🏿
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