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Weusi! Tutashinda bila shaka

"As I went through Umi's archive, I found that while there were some hints of this in her own upbringing, the times she was raised in were quite different;, making her choices around Black identity, reflective of her generation, even more compelling."

Black Girlhood

 
1950s - 1960s
Black Girlhood

Black Arts

 
1950s-1970s
Black Arts

Integration

 
1950s-1970s
Integration

Afrocentricity

 
1960s-1980s
Afrocentricity
Curator's Notes:

This exhibition is inspired by The East, better known now as the International Festival of the Arts, held yearly each July in Brooklyn, NY. The festival is a cultural institution that embraces and promotes Afrocentric and Pan-African sensibilities and makes space for all kinds of Blackness. For me, it epitomizes the ways Afrocentricity and Pan-Africanism were central to the politics and culture Umi raised me in. As I went through Umi's archive, I found that while there were some hints of this in her own upbringing, the times she was raised in were quite different;, making her choices around Black identity, reflective of her generation, even more compelling. Accordingly, the items in this exhibition mark the shifts in Black social worlds from the 1950s through the 1970s, through Umi's move from bobby socks to Black Power.