Archive for July 25th, 2015

Marilyn Clark, Shilyh Warren, Janelle Ellis: African American Women Film Directors

 Marilyn Clark, Shilyh Warren and Janelle Ellis team up for a conversation and film clips of African American Women Film Directors. RSVP NOW!

When: November 4, 7 pm
Where: RSVP for address, WordSpace@WordSpace.Us
Refreshments made possible by Spiral Diner and Ben E. Keith!

Marilyn Clark

MARILYN CLARK, is the Education and Outreach Coordinator of the South Dallas Cultural Center with 30 years of A long time South Dallas resident and one of its most outspoken advocates, Ms. Clark brings years of experience to this position as both an activist and educator. From her years with Sesame Street to her time at Cable Access along with her stints as political organizer for Rep. Jim Mattox, Ms. Clark’s experience is invaluable.

 

SHILYH WARREN (Assistant Professor of Film Studies, UT Dallas) will present the early history of black women’s filmmaking, beginning with Zora Neale Hurston’s ethnographic films of the late 1920s. Though Hurston is most well known for her literary production, she was also an early pioneer of anthropological filmmaking and the first black woman filmmaker. Black women’s documentary filmmaking would not resurface until the late 1960s with Madeline Anderson’s civil rights films, Integration Report and I Am Somebody. We’ll watch some of these together and discuss the lasting impact of Hurston’s focus on women, spirituality, and the body.

 

Janelle EllisJANELLE ELLIS teaches English Lit at El Centro College. She and Marilyn Clark have worked for decades in support of women in the arts, co-coordinating and curating numerous festivals and film projects, particularly highlighting the voice and art of African Americans.  Currently, they are participating in the Fair Park Film Forum. featuring the work of women in film as a global dialogue.

 

 

BLACK CINEMATEQUE/ FAIR PARK FILM FORUM

Julie Dash and Ava DuVernay with Cheryl Dunye, Tanya Hamilton, Kasi Lemons, Michelle Parkerson, Gina Prince-Blythewood, Dee Rees, and Oprah Winfrey

Friday: all day

Screenings at All Projection Facilities around Fair Park:

National Honorees + Local Filmmakers

Friday night: 7pm

Hall of State Auditorium (downstairs)

Premiere of Julie Dash’s new DOC on Vertamae Smart-Grosvenor “Culinary Griot”: TRAVEL NOTES OF A GEECHEE GIRL

Introduced with Docs by Cinematic Foremothers Zora Neale Hurston and Eloyce King Patrick Gist

Saturday noon: 11am to 1pm

Luncheon (Gullah Cuisine) in Galleries of African-American Museum with TRIBUTE to JULIE DASH: Great Director

Saturday afternoon: 2 to 4pm

Panel Discussion Filmed by C-Span in Auditorium

Moderated by Jacqueline Bobo (Audience by Invitation)

Saturday evening: 5 to 8pm

Gala Reception at Hall of State + seated dinner for Honored Filmmakers with Local Filmmakers

IndieGoGo fundraiser for Black Women Directors

Saturday late night: 9 to 12am

Concert at the Fair Park Band Shell Featuring Erykah Badu


Dawn Lundy Martin

When: Thursday April 21, 7:30 pm
What: African Diaspora: New Dialogues
Where: South Dallas Cultural Center, 3400 S Fitzhugh Ave, Dallas, TX 75210
(214) 939-2787
Refreshments provided by Buttons Jazz Restaurant and Ben E. Keith–Thank You!

DAWN LUNDY MARTIN

DAWN LUNDY MARTIN (1) (1)

Photo by Max Freeman

Dawn Lundy Martin is author of three books of poetry, and three chapbooks. Of her latest collection,  Life in a Box is a Pretty Life  (Nightboat Books 2015), Fred Moten says, “Imagine Holiday singing a Blind alley, or Brooks pricing hardpack dandelion, and then we’re seized and thrown into the festival of detonation we hope we’ve been waiting for.” Associate Professor in the English Department at the University of Pittsburgh, Martin is a member of the three-person performance group, The Black Took Collective. She is also a member of the global artist collective, HOWDOYOUSAYYAMINAFRICAN?, the group that withdrew its work from the 2014 Whitney Biennial to protest the museum’s biased curatorial practices. Martin is currently working on a hybrid memoir, a tiny bit of which appears as the essay, “The Long Road to Angela Davis’s Library,” published in the December 2014  New Yorker  magazine.

About South Dallas Cultural Center and Vicki Meek: The South Dallas Cultural Center is a community center with a wide variety of programs inspired by the vibrancy and diversity of the African Diaspora. The SDCC seeks to educate and inspire through the visual, media, literary and performing arts. Vickie Meek is the award winning director of SDCC. She is a curator, artist and activist. Her decades of service to promote art and racial equity have profoundly impacted the cultural life of Dallas and development of a whole new generation of African American artists. In 2016, Ms. Meek will retire from her office at SDCC to co-develop The Institute for Creative Research in Puerta Viejo, Costa Rica.

 


Karen Finley @ The Kessler Theater

Karen Finley: The Jackie Look

Tickets Now Available

KAREN FINLEY JACKIE O

Friday, April 1 @ The Kessler Theater

Karen Finley is an American performance artist who for three decades has enacted the traumas and psychological complexities of our times before worldwide audiences. In her Reality Shows she takes on the personas of such diverse cultural figures as Liza Minnelli, Terry Schiavo, and Laura Bush. In Dallas she will perform The Jackie Look at the Kessler Theater.

 

Karen Finley


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