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. African Dance Resources From Artslynx - African and African Dance Resources from Artslynx, listing of companies, schools and resources. African-American History Through the Arts - Using depictions of African Americans students at Coral Gables Senior High School, FL trace the history of African Americans. com The film industry resource for the black community. Center for the Arts of the African Diaspora - exhibits, educational programs, history and general information. |
. African Dance Resources From Artslynx - African and African Dance Resources from Artslynx, listing of companies, schools and resources. African-American History Through the Arts - Using depictions of African Americans students at Coral Gables Senior High School, FL trace the history of African Americans. com The film industry resource for the black community. Center for the Arts of the African Diaspora - exhibits, educational programs, history and general information.
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However there is no doubting the "soul" of this piece because if you were an African American and experienced all that David Hammons had, wouldn't you have pledged allegiance to a different flag. ." This reinvention of the American Flag is significant because it makes a racial and cultural statement about the identity and place of African Americans in the United States. This piece will allow us as viewers to begin to comprehend the difference between being classified as an African American as opposed to a Black American. The color blue has been replaced with green and the white has been replaced with black. |
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it all depends on who is seeing and we've been depending on someone else's sight. " Cultural Context The Door was constructed around 1969 and should be viewed as a work of protest and of strength. It represents the American system, which has effectively closed doors to a large portion of its population, especially African Americans. It is significant to note that the work portrays the perseverance of what is probably a male, with his body pressed against a closed university admissions office door. This work of art was especially relevant in an era when African Americans were pushing for hard-won rights that had supposedly been secured through civil rights legislation in 1964 but had not yet become a reality in 1969. |
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