Sentences with phrase «urban youth culture»

Embracing a variety of media - principally photography, but also drawing, animation, performance and sculpture - the work of Robin Rhode uses simple, ephemeral devices to comment on urban youth culture, colonialism and socio - economic issues in a simple, witty and subtly effective way.
Captured in serial photographs and stop - motion videos, Rhode's work explores urban youth culture, socioeconomic inequality, and outgrowths of post-Colonialism.
Beat Nation: Art, Hip Hop and Aboriginal Culture describes a generation of artists who juxtapose urban youth culture with Aboriginal identity to create works that reflect the current realities of Aboriginal peoples today.
This exhibition of new photographs signals a departure from the urban youth culture images for which the artist is well known.
Graffiti is now a recognized contemporary art form, thanks in large part to the popularity of hip - hop and urban youth culture.
Music emerging out of UK urban youth culture originally broadcast on pirate radio.

Not exact matches

Mr. Rotimi Ogunleye from Commerce and Industry to Physical Planning and Urban Development; Mr. Steve Ayorinde from Ministry of Information and Strategy to Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture, Mr. Kehinde Bamigbetan from Communities and Communication to Ministry of Information and Strategy; Mr. Babatunde Durosinmi Etti from Ministry of Wealth Creation to Ministry of the Environment; Mrs. Uzamat Akinbile - Yusuf from Ministry of Youth and Social Development to Ministry of Wealth Creation; Mr. Agboola Dabiri from Central Business District to Ministry of Youth and Social Development.
Her schedule can read like a map of multiculturalism in New York: opening a 24 - hour center for L.G.B.T.Q. youth in Queens, touring an urban farm in East Harlem, a Hispanic Heritage event at Gracie Mansion one night and a transgender theater performance another, opening a substance use clinic at the Gay Men's Health Crisis headquarters in Manhattan, attending a reading of writer James Baldwin at a center for black culture — all since late September.
It all began in 2002 when Karl - Oskar Olsen and Brian SS Jensen set up a clothing company that mixes high - end fashion with youth and urban culture streetwear.
Hasköy youth, who are not considered a part of normal Turkey, who are excluded both from the labor market and the imaginary urban culture, return to the middle class spaces they are cast out from like boomerangs to scare off the middle class.
She reports that hip - hop culture has become «a global currency for status among urban youth
Through extensive study in the areas of next generation learning, social and emotional learning, wellness, urban planning, Hip - Hop culture, Chicago history, the opportunity gaps that exist among marginalized students, economic mobility, arts education, and the at - risk communities on Chicago's South Side, Art in Motion has a solid research foundation upon which to build an innovative middle and high school that has the potential to change the narrative for many Southside youth.
With many groundbreaking publications to his credit, he has analyzed the cultures, languages, and texts of urban youth, using quantitative, critical literary, ethnographic, and sociolinguistic research methods to answer complex questions at the center of equity and social justice in education.
Cleage captures the mores, culture, and rhythm of black urban youth and the romantic tensions between mature black adults as she weaves contemporary issues into a love story.
Rhythm Factory's location in the city's popular Bangladeshi quarter — on Whitechapel Road, just around the corner from the East End's well - known Brick Lane — has historically been home to successive waves of immigrants and forms an eclectic urban melting pot with a flourishing youth culture and infectiousvibe.
A viral flourishing sub culture form of art originally a tool to mark territorial boundaries of urban youth.
(The term «bling» is rooted in urban youth and rap culture of the 1990s and refers to flashy jewelry and accessories.)
Honorary Chairs Robert Klein John Patrick Shanley Artist Chairs Dillon Cohen Katie Holten Tim Rollins Co-Chairs Laura Blanco Olivia Douglas Marilyn Greene Ruth Corn Roth Location: Conrad New York 102 North End Avenue New York City (Between Murray and Vesey Streets) Special Guest Performer Kevin Harris Jazz Pianist and Faculty at Berklee College of Music Master of Ceremonies Lynda Lopez Journalist; Anchor, CBS Newsradio — AUCTION Featuring Artists Diana Al Hadid Miya Ando Alexandre Arrechea Jared Aufrichtig Donald Baechler Claudia Baez Patrick Berran Janet Biggs Julien Bismuth Ernesto Burgos Alberto Casado Willie Cole Caetano De Almeida Shepard Fairey Tony Feher Ramiro Fernandez Jake Fernandez Dan Finsel Tony Fitzpatrick Fragments Jewelry Mary Frank Jane Freilicher Richard Garet Theaster Gates Leon Golub Dan Graham Joel Greenberg Clinton Hill Steven Hirsch Katie Holten Carl Holty Michael Joo Anna K.E. Tim Rollins and K.O.S. Maira Kalman Betsy Kaufman Mike Kelly Keizo Kitajima George Kovacs Thomas Lanigan - Schmidt Lisa Leone Dean Levin Jeff Chien - Hsing Liao Rubén Torres Llorca Hew Locke Vivian Maier Gordon Matta - Clark Mary Mattingly George McNeil Jessica Mein Sean Mellyn Jose Toirac and Meira Marrero Pat Moser Richard Mosse Isamu Noguchi JJ PEET Karlos Pérez Jon Pestoni Elizabeth Peyton Chloe Piene Liliana Porter Jon Pylypchuk Jon Pylypchuk Lee Quinones Raquel Rabinovich Pedro Reyes Katrin Saigurdardottir Emilio Sanchez Jessica Sanders Kate Shepherd Alan Shields Harriet Shorr Samara Shuter Amy Sillman Xaviera Simmons Michelle Stuart Rachel Sussman Swoon Jorge Tacla Tats Cru Henry Taylor Ana Tiscornia Gladys Triana James Turrell Nicola Tyson Manuela Viera Gallo Darren Waterston Madeline Weinrib Stanley Whitney Timothy Woodman — Benefit Committee Rae Alexander - Minter ** Eric Appel * Augusto Arbizo * Sigmund Balka ** Laura Blanco ** and Robert F. Shainheit Holly Block ** Linda Blumberg ** Marianne Boesky Laura Bohn * James - Keith Brown and Eric Diefenbach Deborah Buck Victoria Cabanos ** and Philip Hecht Ellen Cantrowitz * Katherine Chan * Fiona Cibani James Cohan Alessandra DiGiusto ** Olivia Douglas ** and David DiDomenico Dana Emmott Lea and Stephan Freid * James Fuentes * Liz Goldman Gail Gregg Marilyn and Stephen Greene ** Horacio José and Julia P. Herzberg * Susan Hinko ** and Carl Batlin Joyce Hogi ** Jeanna Hussey ** Susan and Steven Jacobson Keesha Johnson Nicole Klagsbrun * Liz Klein * Alice Kosmin ** Serge and Ian Krawiecki Gazes Joan Krevlin ** Ashley Leutner, Paddle8 * Cher Lewis Teresa Liszka & Martin Weinstein Candice Madey * Mary Beth Mandanas ** Diane and Adam Max Cormac McEnery ** Lisa Melmed Cohen Joseph Mizzi ** Nathan Newman ** Ifeoma Okoronkwo Aitkenhead ** Wendy Osloff * Debra Palma Meredith Palmer Penny Pilkington * Lesley and Jonathan Plotkin ** Nancy Portnoy * Simon Preston * Stacey Richman Tim Rollins ** Ruth Corn Roth ** Mary Sabbatino Don Savelson ** Abigail Scheuer Carole Server ** and Oliver Frankel Lauren Sharfman Manon Slome ** Joshua Stein PLLC ** Lybess Sweezy and Ken Miller Sarah Sze Frederieke S. Taylor Leslie Tonkonow Madeline Weinrib Kate Werble * * Art Auction Committee ** Trustees List in formation About the Teen Council The Bronx Museum Teen Council, comprised of a group of high school students working closely with educators in the Museum's Media Lab, was created in 2005 to make contemporary art and culture accessible to urban youth.
His works often call into question issues of police violence and authoritarianism exercised against youth and communities of color, as well as highlight vernacular language, architecture, and food culture associated with the urban lexicon.
Born in South Africa in 1976, Berlin - based Robin Rhode uses the barest of means to comment on urban poverty, the politics of leisure and the commodification of youth cultures.
Born and raised in Johannesburg, Rhode's do - it - yourself art comments on urban poverty, the politics of leisure and the commodification of youth cultures.
The Bronx Museum Teen Council, comprised of a group of high school students working closely with educators in the Museum's Media Lab, was created in 2005 to make contemporary art and culture accessible to urban youth.
In addition, Katelyn volunteers with the YWCA Aboriginal Mentorship Program, connecting urban aboriginal youth to community, culture, tradition and art.
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