BlackStar

Tag: Event

  • BlackStar Presents Revival!, a Series of Virtual Celebrations for Collective Joy and Resilience

    BlackStar Presents Revival!, a Series of Virtual Celebrations for Collective Joy and Resilience

    BlackStar Film Festival is proud to present Revival! an audio-visual meditation, a three-week series of live-streamed virtual dance parties and live performances that celebrate the visual and sonic culture of shared Black spiritual experiences. The special series, part of BlackStar’s efforts to provide engaging programming that extends beyond the annual film festival, will begin next Sunday June, 14 at 2pm EST, streaming for free on BlackStar’s Twitch channel.

    Revival! is an attempt to reimagine and practice what collective joy and resilience looks like in times of crisis. Subtly drawing upon José Esteban Muñoz’s notion of ecstasy as “an invitation, a call to a then-and-there, a not-yet-here… a collective potentiality,” Revival! treats ecstasy not only as a corrective balm to injury but a world-making claim to the right of life, imagination, and joyful expression, an especially critical response to our current moment.

    The audio-visual meditation offers the opportunity to step out of the here-and-now and virtually tap into what is not-yet-here. Using aural- and image-based motifs from the African diaspora the artists reverberate the intimacies and pleasures of shared spiritual experiences from across time and place.

    Revival! invites longtime friends and frequent collaborators DJs Lil’ DaveOluwafemi, and Rashid Zakat to take turns creating live sound mixes over moving image backdrops. Each accomplished cultural workers in their own right, Lil’ Dave, Oluwafemi and Rashid Zakat are deeply invested and versed in crafting stories across genre. David ‘Lil’ Dave’ Adams is the producer and host of the podcast Excellent Reception, Rashid Zakat is a prolific portraitist and cinematographer, and Oluwafemi’s trajectory as a visual artist and illustrator situate them perfectly as a unit for this kind of cross-disciplinary, experimental work.

    Funding for this series is provided in part by the Pennsylvania Humanities Council. Full schedule is below:


    Episode 1: Rashid Zakat
    June 14, 2020, 2pm EDT

    Episode 2: Lil’ Dave
    June 21, 2020, 2pm EDT

    Episode 3: Oluwafemi
    June 28, 2020, 2pm EDT

     

    You can RSVP for each episode in the series on Eventbrite here. More information is available at blackstarfest.org/revival

    About BlackStar Film Festival

    The BlackStar Film Festival is an annual celebration of the visual and storytelling traditions of
    the African diaspora and global communities of color — showcasing films by Black, Brown, and
    Indigenous people from around the world.

    Press Contacts

    Ed Winstead
    Director, Cultural Counsel
    ed@culturalcounsel.com

    Danellys “D.W.” Wong
    Account Coordinator, Cultural Counsel
    dw@culturalcounsel.com

    Robert Grand
    Account Coordinator, Cultural Counsel
    robert@culturalcounsel.com

  • BlackStar Hosts Exclusive Screenings of A LOVE SONG FOR LATASHA on Anniversary of L.A. Uprisings

    BlackStar Hosts Exclusive Screenings of A LOVE SONG FOR LATASHA on Anniversary of L.A. Uprisings

    BlackStar Film Festival and Sophia Nahli Allison announced today that they would be hosting three exclusive online screenings of Allison’s A Love Song for Latasha this weekend, in recognition of the 28th anniversary of the L.A. Uprisings. Allison’s 19-minute experimental documentary, which won Best Documentary Short at the 2019 BlackStar Film Festival, centers on the life of Latasha Harlins, the 15-year-old whose 1991 murder in Los Angeles set the stage for the racial justice protests that swept the city the following year.

    This weekend’s screenings will culminate in a live conversation at 5pm ET on May 3rd between Sophia Nahli AllisonInsecure producer Deniese Davis, artist Lynnée DeniseSurviving R. Kelly executive producer dream hampton, and scholar Marcus Anthony Hunter, on the links between visual art, collective memory, and Black liberation.

    The film will be streamed three times consecutively over the course of an hour, beginning at the following times:

    Friday, May 1 – Beginning 7:00pm ET / 4 pm PT

    Saturday, May 2 – Beginning  7:00pm ET / 4 pm PT

    Sunday, May 3 –  Beginning 4:00pm ET / 1 pm PT

    followed by

    5:00pm ET / 2pm PT Live Conversation

    The live streams will be accessible on BlackStar’s Facebook page, here. A Facebook account is not required to view the streams.

    “We are currently living through history, an unprecedented time for us all. Art has always been a tool to reimagine, radically dream, dismantle, and heal. As we approach the 28th anniversary of The 1992 L.A. Riots, how do we engage with the past in a way that is healing and radically transforms our own understanding of time and black liberation? How does engaging with the past allow us to persevere through the present and envision a new future? How does art, the archive, collective memory, and the power of dreaming challenge and dismantle how our stories have been remembered and recorded?,” said Allison. “Latasha Harlins is a name that is synonymous with the riots, but too often nuanced stories of black women and black girls go unnoticed and their trauma becomes their full existence. To commemorate this time in LA history we hold space for Latasha Harlins, celebrating her life and the women who’ve kept her memory alive.”

    A Love Song for Latasha premiered at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival and was an official selection of the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, in addition to winning Best Documentary Short at the 2019 BlackStar Film Festival. BlackStar will stream the film on their Facebook page three times consecutively at 7 pm ET on May 1st and 2nd, and three times again at 4 pm ET on May 3rd. The third and final screening on May 3rd will be followed by the live conversation, at 5 pm ET, also on BlackStar’s Facebook page.

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    Sophia Nahli Allison is an experimental documentary filmmaker, photographer and dreamer. A native of South Central Los Angeles, she disrupts conventional documentary methods by reimagining the archives and excavating hidden truths. Her work is a meditation of the spirit. She conjures ancestral memories to explore the intersection of fiction and non-fiction storytelling. She is a 2020 United States Artists Fellow in Film and has held residencies at The MacDowell Colony, The Camargo Foundation in Cassis, France., The Center for Photography at Woodstock, and POV Spark’s African Interactive Art Residency. She is a recipient of a 2014 Chicago 3Arts Award and has received grants from the Sundance Institute New Frontier Lab Programs, Glassbreaker Films, and Getty Images. In 2017 she was named the Student Video Photographer of the Year by the White House News Photographers Association. She has a Master’s Degree in visual communication from UNC. Past projects have been featured on The New YorkerThe AtlanticThe Root, with Los Angeles Filmforum at MOCA, and more. Her short documentary A Love Song For Latasha premiered at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival, the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, and received the Grand Jury Documentary Prize at AFI Fest, along with Best Documentary Short awards at the New Orleans Film Festival, BlackStar Film Festival, and more including an IDA Documentary Awards Nomination.

    Deniese Davis got her start in entertainment by producing indie low-budget projects including music videos, short films and digital content. In the web-series realm she is best known for producing Issa Rae’s award-winning web series, The Mis-Adventures of Awkward Black Girl. She is currently a Producer on the HBO comedy series Insecure and an Executive Producer on the upcoming HBO limited series The Dolls while continuing to produce and oversee content for Issa Rae Productions. She also serves as COO of ColorCreative, which provides access and opportunities for diverse and emerging writers and recently sold their first feature film Love in America to Universal. Originally from Las Vegas NV, Deniese is an alum of CUNY-Brooklyn College and the American Film Institute Conservatory.

    Lynnée Denise was shaped as a DJ by her parents’ record collection. She’s an artist, scholar, and writer whose work reflects on underground cultural movements, the 1980s and electronic music of the African Diaspora. Lynnée Denise coined the phrase ‘DJ Scholarship’ to reposition the role of the DJ from party purveyor to an archivist, cultural custodian and information specialist.

    dream hampton is a writer and filmmaker from Detroit.

    Marcus Anthony Hunter is the Scott Waugh Endowed Chair in the Division of the Social Sciences, Professor of sociology, and Chair of the department of African American Studies at UCLA. He is author of three books: Black Citymakers: How The Philadelphia Negro Changed Urban America (Oxford University Press, 2013), Chocolate Cities: The Black Map of American Life (University of California Press, 2018) coauthored with Zandria F. Robinson, and The New Black Sociologists (Routledge, 2018).

    About BlackStar Film Festival

    The BlackStar Film Festival is an annual celebration of the visual and storytelling traditions of the African diaspora and global communities of color — showcasing films by Black, Brown, and Indigenous people from around the world.

    Press Contacts

    Ed Winstead
    Director, Cultural Counsel
    ed@culturalcounsel.com

    Danellys “D.W.” Wong
    Account Coordinator, Cultural Counsel
    dw@culturalcounsel.com

    Robert Grand
    Account Coordinator, Cultural Counsel
    robert@culturalcounsel.com

  • BlackStar to Bring Common Field Convening to Philadelphia

    BlackStar to Bring Common Field Convening to Philadelphia

    We are proud to announce our partnership with Common Field — a national network of experimental, independent, visual arts organizations and organizers — to bring the annual Convening to Philadelphia, PA from April 25 – 28, 2019. The Common Field Convening is an itinerant gathering that brings together 500+ local and national arts organizers to explore the state of the field of artists organizations and to share resources, knowledge and methods for artist-led, artist-run, and artist-centered projects, spaces and practices.

    Over the past year, Common Field has worked with BlackStar as part of a group of 14 local organizing partners as well as a growing network of 80+ Philadelphia arts organizations and organizers in order to connect the local contexts and conditions with the interests of the national Common Field Network.

    As a platform for gathering the many artist centered organizations, the Convening recognizes the value of their contributions as a critical and central part of the city’s cultural fabric. It builds awareness for these practices that often take place in unique contexts, and serve and represent more diverse communities. Together we understand there is an urgency to gather around issues of social justice and equity, as well as practical needs and tools for many organizations in our network.

    Find out more about the Convening and get Your Tickets to the 2019 Common Field Convening online. Check out the program, presenters and full schedule. Follow Common Field on social media (IG | FB | TW) and sign up for their newsletter for regular updates.