Art
City of North Charleston Seeking New Artist-in-Residence
CHARLESTON CHRONICLE — Each fiscal year the City of North Charleston Cultural Arts Department contracts a professional visual artist to serve as the City’s Artist-in-Residence (AIR). The department is currently seeking to fill the position for fiscal year 2019/20. The City’s Artist-in-Residence serves as a key resource for the department’s outreach programs, especially in the area of art instruction. The selected artist will share his/her unique skills, talents, and experiences by providing free visual art residencies, workshops, and demonstrations in public schools, recreation facilities, and community gathering spaces within the city limits of North Charleston. Local visual artists with a willingness to share their talents and an ability to work with students of all ages are invited to apply for the part-time, contracted position by Friday, June 28, 2019.
Activism
Art of the African Diaspora Celebrates Legacy and Community at Richmond Art Center
Now in its 29th year, Art of the African Diaspora is the Bay Area’s longest-running exhibition of its kind. Its roots stretch back to 1989, when artist and educator Marie Johnson Calloway founded Colors of Black, a salon for African American artists. That gathering inspired artists Jan Hart-Schuyers and Rae Louise Hayward to establish The Art of Living Black at the Richmond Art Center in 1996.
Activism
‘I Was There Too’ Reveals the Hopes, Dangers of Growing Up in The Black Panther Party
On July 20, at the Oakland Museum of California’s Spotlight Sundays, Gabriel, the daughter of a Black Panther Party couple, Emory Douglas, minister of culture, and artist-educator, Gayle Asalu Dickson, gave a raw personal view of being raised in the middle of the Black Power Movement.
Activism
The Past and Future of Hip Hop Blend in Festival at S.F.’s Midway
“The Music and AI: Ethics at the Crossroads” panel featured X.Eyee, CEO of Malo Santo and senior advisor for UC Berkeley’s AI Policy, Sean Kantrowitz, director of media and content @Will.I.A.’s FYI, Adisa Banjoko of 64 Blocks and Bishop Chronicles podcast, and Julie Wenah, chairwoman of the Digital Civil Rights Coalition.
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Activism3 weeks agoOakland Post: Week of April 8 – 14, 2026
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Activism3 weeks agoOakland Post: Week of April 1 – 7, 2026
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Activism1 week agoMayor Barbara Lee Proclaims April 9 as ‘100 Black Men of the Bay Area Day’
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#NNPA BlackPress2 weeks agoIN MEMORIAM: Rest in Power — Minnesota Loses a True Warrior in Yusef Mgeni
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Activism1 week agoBuilding Bridges of Support: How AAPI Equity Alliance Is Strengthening California’s Anti-Hate Network





