Are all elements that convey a story of Black struggle, beauty, and identity in modern America, and they are included in Atlanta artist Craig Singleton’s ---aka C Flux Sing's--- new collection of paintings entitled Heavy Clouds. The exhibit is located at the ArtsXchange’s Jack Sinclair Gallery in East Point, Georgia. Organized by the gallery's Curator Courtney Brooks, the show opened on December 14th.
A poet, Mrs. Sonia Sanchez, born Wilsonia Benita Driver, and key figure of the Black Arts Movement once said, “The Black artist is dangerous. Black art controls the Negro’s reality, negates negative influences, and creates positive images.”
Like many other elements of American culture in 2020, our art world has been invaded by technology. Noisy, avant-garde multimedia exhibits occupy museums and galleries everywhere, and we might find ourselves feeling nostalgic and wishing for a return to classic styles. And, that’s where Contemporary Artist Mario Henrique delivers.
The power of reality TV changes lives in a big way. From engagement rings to cash prizes, the last man or woman standing on a reality show will walk away with a reward that represents a major milestone in their lives. But for many contestants, the show doesn’t end there.
Earlier this year in Shrewsbury, a small village in the western England country, a nine-year-old boy named Joe Whale had a problem with his school. Joe had caught flack for doodling in class, and the school’s limited art courses weren’t much practice. His creativity didn’t have a surface to explore. Determined to encourage his artistic development, Joe’s parents, Greg and Nessa Whale enrolled Joe in local after-school art courses. Soon after, thanks to a sociable art teacher, an agreeable restaurant, and a talented young artist, a new wimmelbilder style art exhibit went on display in town.
The personal lives of celebrities will eternally be the subject of great curiosity for the majority of humanity who spend their lives out of the spotlight. For those under it, their existence is poked and prodded from the removed medium of tabloids and reality television. Regardless of whether the information is true or false, people of all identities find themselves snagging the latest issue of People at the grocery store checkout counter. Monumental events in a celebrity's life, such as a wedding or a fiftieth birthday celebration, have a tendency to be more heavily guarded from the press. This results in a hyper fixation on the event by the press as speculative articles flow alongside an equal number of stories about pathetic paparazzi who broke their leg trying to jump a ten-foot tall fence so they could snap Kim Kardashian saying, “I do!” on camera.
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