Alper Initiative for Washington Art It Takes a Nation
ALPER INITIATIVE FOR WASHINGTON ART IT TAKES A NATION IT TAKES A NATION: ART FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE WITH EMORY DOUGLAS AND THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY, AFRICOBRA, AND CONTEMPORARY WASHINGTON ARTISTS September 6 – October 23, 2016 American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center Washington, DC ALPER INITIATIVE FOR WASHINGTON ART FOREWORD This exhibition presents the American important work gave visual form to I am grateful to Sandy Bellamy for University Museum’s best efforts to the 10 points of the Black Panther undertaking the formidable and timely accomplish artistic objectives rarely ideology that, unfortunately, continue task of organizing this exhibition and found in the same space and time: to have relevance fifty years later: writing the catalog, and Asantewa the exhibition is a program of the freedom, employment, opposition Boakyewa for her curatorial assistance. Alper Initiative for Washington Art, so against economic exploitation and Most importantly, I am thankful for our charge is to offer the community marginalization, affordable housing, the artists in the exhibition who have a venue for the examination and quality education, free health care, raised their voices so powerfully and promotion of the accomplishments opposition to police brutality, eloquently: Akili Ron Anderson, Holly of artists in the greater Washington, opposition to wars of aggression, Bass, Graham Boyle, Wesley Clark, Jay DC region. And, as a grantee of the opposition to the prison industrial Coleman, Larry Cook, Tim Davis, Jeff CrossCurrents Foundation, we are also complex, and access to the necessities Donaldson, Emory Douglas, Shaunté committed to presenting an exhibition of life. Gates, Jennifer Gray, Jae Jarrell, with strong relevance to the issues Wadsworth Jarrell, Njena Surae Jarvis, facing voters in the 2016 national The exhibition title is taken from an Simmie Knox, James Phillips, Beverly elections.
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