Browsing the archives for the Art category.

Our Berlin Wall

IMG_1587And so today marks the twentieth year of the demolition of the Berlin Wall in Germany. To commemorate it on campus, the German arm of the Foreign Languages Department in which I work have unveiled a public art exhibition featuring texts, artworks, pictures, history, (German) music, and most notably a miniature replica of the old Wall. Constructed with wood, and strategically placed at a publicly accessible spot on campus, the “wall” already randomly graffitied stands today both as a reminder of the historic day, as well as the ingenuity of the Department of Foreign Languages, especially of Belinda Carstens – the head of the department who is also a professor of German. Along with the chance to take pictures with the “wall”, students have been encouraged to spray-paint the wall and decorate it with their own graffitis as they see fit, just like was done with the real Wall in those days by angry Berliners and rebels who wanted it torn down. Needless to say, the over twenty feet long wall is already a notable piece of attraction on campus, and will be till the end of the week.

Here are a few of the pictures I took today, along with Catherine Xavier, an Indian member of the department. The exhibition will be open every day for the rest of this week, and there will be paint brushes and paints for each visitor to use to their artistic advantage on the symbolic representation of the old wall.

IMG_1649But amidst my excitement to be here at this moment in time, here’s a dilemma I face: I can’t yet figure what I want to write on this wall. Prof Doug Simms of the deparment had taken his time today to draw on it a sickle and a hammer (the old symbol of communism) turned upside down, like it was on the old wall, according to him. A few of the other graffitis on this “wall” reflect each painter’s own sensibilities, and not always related to the politics of the Wall itself. So here I am, thinking (or asking YOU, as the case may be) that when I go back there tomorrow with a brush and paint in hand, what other creative texts or symbols (in any language) should I be writing on this remade wall from twenty years ago beside the obvious personal statement in my mind at this moment which simply reads, in German: “ktravula war hier“?

More International Night Photos

IMG_1263IMG_1264IMG_1273IMG_1275IMG_1286IMG_1287IMG_1290IMG_1297IMG_1302IMG_1320IMG_1331IMG_1307IMG_1323IMG_1276IMG_1329IMG_1350IMG_1374IMG_1359IMG_1411IMG_1498Here are the final set of photos taken at the International Night celebration of cultures here on campus. It’s an annual event featuring drama, songs, dance and food from different parts of the world. Visitors also came from different parts of the country for the event that has become famous for its diversity. The roll call of countries featured either in the programme’s activities, food menu, or the guest list of where the visitors came from includes but is not limited to Nigeria, Israel, Egypt, Iran, Benin, Cameroon, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Germany, France, India, Kenya, Palestine, Phillipines, Nepal, England, Spain and Turkey.

Needless to say, it was an enchanting night of beautiful people, beautiful performances and beautiful food. A notable member of the audience was Nigerian poet Obi Nwakama whom I was meeting however briefly for the first time.

The next big programme of this magnitude will take place next March. It is the African Student’s Night, and from what I hear, it will be (almost) just as grand as this one, and I look forward to it. But even if I miss it inevitably, I will retain the image from this event where a masquerade from West Africa showed up on an American stage and captivated the audience with energetic dance steps for more than twenty minutes. Of all the beautiful performances of the night, there was no denying the colour and energy of the African masquerade, even on a foreign soil.

“Break Word” with EBR Writers Club

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville/Eugene B. Redmond Writers Club/East St. Louis Higher Education Center: 618 650-3991; eredmon@siue.edu

TO: All Media; Art, Dance, English & Music Departments; Poets & Writers

November 17, “2009”: “Break Word” with EBR Writers Club & Friends . . .

East Saint Louis, IL—“2009: Reflections & Projections in Poetry, Dance, Jazz, and Visuals”—a feature of the Eugene B. Redmond Writers Club’s annual “Break Word with the World” program—will be held on Tuesday, Nov. 17 at 6:00 p.m. in Bldg. D of the SIUE/East St. Louis Higher Education Center, 601 J.R. Thompson Drive. The public is invited to this free event.

Featured Poets/Performers will include members of the Soular Systems Ensemble— Roscoe Crenshaw, Susan Lively, Charlois Lumpkin, Darlene Roy, and Eugene B. Redmond—along with these rich voices: Michael Castro, K. Curtis Lyle, Patricia Merritt, Jeffrey Skoblow, Lena J. Weathers, and Treasure Williams. “2009” will also feature an open mic segment.

The “2009 Experience in Dance,” offered by SIUE/ESL’s Center for the Performing Arts (directed by Theo Jamison), will also be presented, along with “Michael’s Magic, Miles’ Smiles, Motown’s 50th, Michelle’s Show-&-Tell & Other 2009 ‘Milestones,’” a mixed media exhibit of “festivals & funerals.”

Curated by Alfred Henderson II, an SIUE graduate student and special assistant to Eugene B. Redmond, the exhibit will feature photos, posters, newspapers, magazines, art work, book and (LP) album covers, t-shirts, and other memorabilia from the EBR Collection.

Rounding out “2009,” will be “Jazz to the 2009th Degree,” an eclectic repertory from the East St. Louis Senior High School Concert Band, directed by Delano Redmond.

The Eugene B. Redmond Writers Club, founded in 1986 and named for East St. Louis’ Poet Laureate, is enjoying its 23rd year. All writers are welcome to meetings, held at the SIUE/ESL Center on the first and third Tuesday, September through May. Club Trustees include Maya Angelou, Amiri Baraka, Avery Brooks, Walter Mosley, Quincy Troupe, Jerry Ward Jr., and Dr. Lena J. Weathers. Darlene Roy is president.

Besides the Club, other sponsors of “2009” include “Drumvoices Revue,” SIUE, Black River Writers Press, and the East St. Louis Cultural Revival Campaign Committee.

For more information about the Writers Club or area cultural-literary activities, call 618 650-3991 or write the group at P.O. Box 6165, East St. Louis, Illinois 62201; eredmon@siue.edu.

International Night 2009 Photos

IMG_1270IMG_1267IMG_1299IMG_1318IMG_1310IMG_1326IMG_1336IMG_1355IMG_1364IMG_1373IMG_1381IMG_1386IMG_1395IMG_1402IMG_1412IMG_1427IMG_1451IMG_1461IMG_1430IMG_1285“Experience is something you can’t get for nothing.”

-Oscar Wilde

What Boredom Caused

ktravula2ktravulaBoth optimists and pessimists contribute to our society. The optimist invents the airplane and the pessimist the parachute.
– Gil Stern

No degree of dullness can safeguard a work against the determination of critics to find it facinating.
Harold Rosenberg