Met: Afrofuturist Room · Uncategorized

Space and Imagination in Before Yesterday We Could Fly: An Afrofuturist Period Room & Fictions of Emancipation

Entering Before Yesterday We Could Fly: An Afrofuturist Period Room, we imagined the house as one that would have existed in Seneca Village, the current site of Central Park and the MET Museum itself. The room takes you on a trip through time, mixing the past with the present. For Trinity, the house invoked the… Continue reading Space and Imagination in Before Yesterday We Could Fly: An Afrofuturist Period Room & Fictions of Emancipation

Field Trips (Met, Schomburg, Harlem) · Met: Afrofuturist Room · Schomburg Visit · Uncategorized

Trip To The Met

Last Thursday we explored Schomburg, Harlem at the Met Museum. What caught our group’s eye was the TV in the center of the Schomburg exhibit. The ideas that our groups expressed was the idea of the play on words on the saying “the revolution will not be televised’. The term was coined by musician Gil… Continue reading Trip To The Met

Extra Credit Assignments (Feb 19, March 1, March 16, March 22, April 14) · Field Trips (Met, Schomburg, Harlem) · Met: Afrofuturist Room · Uncategorized

afrofurturist room

having your own space =afrofuturism, futuristic, not on earth, anti blackness is a global issue and to escapee’s it we have to leave the planet.   reimagining black people in cultural art, Countee Cullen poem(“Yet Do I Marvel” by Countee Cullen); insets the black experience with classical references, similar to how the artists relied on… Continue reading afrofurturist room

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The Weary Blues and Social Progress Draft #2

Something striking about Opportunity Magazine is the way that it is formatted. Poems, essays, and illustrations all follow one another throughout the magazine to create a seamless archive of Black achievements. One of those illustrations that seemed particularly significant appeared in the September 1925 issue of Opportunity. The illustration was drawn by Charles Robinson, and… Continue reading The Weary Blues and Social Progress Draft #2