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Black Femme Character Dependency Dark Skin Directory || Entertainers Pt.2 (O-Z)
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Octavia Spencer | Ola Ray | Olunike Adeliyi | Olivia Sang | Omono Okojie | Oprah Winfrey | Oyin Oladejo | Ozioma Akagha
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Patina Miller | Philomena Kwao | Phina Oruche | Phylicia Benn | Phylicia Rashad | Pippa Bennett Warner | Precious Adams | Precious Mustapha | Pretty Tye
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Queen Quet | Quiana Welch | Quinta Brunson | Quvenzhane Wallis
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Raigan Harris | Rashida Renée | Reagan Gomez | Regina King | Regina Van Helvert | Renee Elise Goldsberry | Retta | Riele Downs | Ronke Adekoluejo | Rose Jackson | Ruth (IAmBabeRuth/BabeRuthTV) | Rutina Wesley | Ryan Destiny
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Saidah Arrika Ekulona | Samantha Liana Cole | Samantha Marie Ware | Sandra Dede (sandramabelle) | Saniyya Sidney | Sara Martins | Sasha Lambon | Sasheer Zamata | Sese Madaki Ali | Shahadi Wright Joseph | Shanice Williams | Shannon Thornton | Sharon Duncan Brewster | Sharon Ferguson | Sharon Pierre-Louis | Shea Couleé | Sherri Shepherd | Sheryl Lee Ralph | Shyko Amos | Sibongile Mlambo | Sierra McClain | Simbi Khali | Simona Brown | Simone Biles | Simone Missick | Sindi-Dlathu | Skai Jackson | Skye P. Marshall | Sokhna Cisse | Sokhna Niane | Sonya Eddy | Sophia Walker | Stefanee Martin | Stella Okech | Subah Koj | Sufe Bradshaw | Susan Wokoma | Symphony Sanders
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T’Nia Miller | Tamara Dobson | Tamara Lawrance | Tamera Mclaughlin (ayethatsmera) Dwarfism Community | Tanerélle | Tanedra Howard | Tanisha Scott | Tanya Moodie | Tanyell Waivers | Taral Hicks | Tarana Burke | Tempestt Bledsoe | Tenika Davis | Teresa Graves | Terri J. Vaughn | Teshi Thomas | Teyonah Parris | Theresa Fractale | Thishiwe Ziqubu | Tichina Arnold | Tiffany Mann | Tonya Pinkens | Tracey Ifeachor | Tricia Akello | Trina McGee | Trina Parks | Tyra Ferrell |
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Vanessa Bell Calloway | Vanessa Lee Chester | Vanessa Gyimah | Vanessa Nakat | Vanesu Samunyai (Kyo Ra) | Vanessa Estelle Williams | Vaneza Oliveira | Veronica S. Taylor | Viola Davis | Vivica Ifeoma
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Wakeema Hollis | Whitney Houston | Whoopi Goldberg | Wunmi Mosaku
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Xosha Roquemore
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Yaani King | Yacine Diop | Yandeh Sallah | YanjuSoFine (Yanju Stephens/Adeyanju Adeleleke) | Yanna McIntosh | Yaya Dacosta | Yaz | Yetide Badaki | Yolonda Ross | Yusra Warsama | Yvonne Okoro | Yvonne Orji
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Zainab Johnson | Zelda Harris | Zenobia | Zethu Dlomo | Zhariah Hubbard | Ziwe Fumudoh | Zola Williams | Zozibini Tunzi
#to add to darkskin directory
#BFCD Dark Skin December#BFCD DS Directory#Black Actresses and Female Entertainers Masterlist#Black Women in Entertainment#Flooding Your Dash with Black Lady Face#black women#dark skinned beauty#dark skinned women#List will be updated as needed#tags masterlist#masterlist#BFCD Masterlist#BFCD Dark Skin December 2022
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A Black Feminist Homecoming
#A Black Feminist Homecoming#amber ruffin#evelyn from the internets#the original pinettes#the baby dolls#nana anoa nantambu#chari l.#alexis pauline gumbs#sangodare#raquel willis#andrea jenkins#barbara smith#paris hatcher#crystal des-ogugua#moya bailey#ola ronke#m adams#nalo zidan#kenyon farrow#stanley fritz#byron hurt#adaku utah#julia bennet#for the gworls#women with a vision#rede mulheres negras#mama fund#lead to life#mwende 'frequency' katwiwa
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“Know that there is a time coming in your life when dirt settles and the patterns form a picture.”
- Yrsa Daley-Ward
Handcut Full Moon Conjure Collage/Hunter’s Moon by Ola Ronke 10.20.21
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SQC 2022: Royaltoms triumphs in the battle of the Queens
The second match of the day saw Royaltoms Queens demolished Kaduna Queens 3-0 in the maiden edition of the Soccer Queens Cup at the Confluence Queens Stadium, Lokoja on Tuesday. With nothing to separate the sides at halftime, Ronke Ola broke the deadlock in the 50th minute after dribbling past the defense and slotted past thee goalkeeper. Six minutes later, substitute Angela Tersoo doubled the…
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Reposted from @thefreeblackwomenslibrary.atl #Repost @thefreeblackwomenslibrary_la • • • • • 🚨 COMMUNITY ALERT + REQUEST 🚨: Last night, @facebook and @instagram disabled Ola Ronke's accounts for @thefreeblackwomenslibrary with no warning after posting a poem written by Audre Lorde. @facebook is claiming Ola has violated community standards. Ola's pages have been a digital archive of Black women and girls and book related content for nearly 5 years, inspiring all of us to continue preserving and uplifting our stories. This is a violation and attack on OUR community that works to bring Black feminist joy through art and literature, both on and off line. We are urging you to SHARE this post with the hashtag #FreeTFBWL and sign the petition in the link in our bio calling for Ola's page to be restored TODAY. . . . @thefreeblackwomenslibrary_la @thefreeblackwomenslibrary.atl @thefreeblackwomenslibrary_det @thefreeblackwomenslibrary_htx https://www.instagram.com/p/B-hX_65JEvL/?igshid=1i4xqydg7jjcg
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The Free Black Women’s Library Celebrates Black Authors and Readers
December 26, 2019 by We Need Diverse Books
The Free Black Women's Library Celebrates Black Authors and Readers We need Diverse Books - Ola Ronke Akinmowo
Bonding Over Bell Hooks, Beyoncé, and Black Womanhood — The Sisterhood of Traveling Books
THROUGH THE FREE BLACK WOMEN’S LIBRARY, OLA RONKE AKINMOWO HOPES TO NOT ONLY CELEBRATE BLACK WOMEN WRITERS BUT ALSO NURTURE A WELCOMING COMMUNITY SPACE By Asha Sridhar
Between finding a home for her expanding library, teaching yoga and bagging fellowships, Ola Ronke Akinmowo, the Brooklyn-based founder of the Free Black Women’s Library has been busy forging a positive narrative about black women. Her traveling library of 2000-odd books, all written by black women, tell stories of love, hope, trauma and most importantly, resilience.
In a freewheeling conversation over a cup of tea, she discusses the origins of her library, her childhood reading experiences and the importance of diversity in books.
“I wanted to do something that felt nourishing, healing, and interesting, something that different people could connect to and plug into, and I wanted black women and black girls to be the focus,” she says. More often than not, the conversation around the lives of black women, she feels, tends to have a tragic or pathological element to it, framing them as victims or a problem that needs to be fixed. “I wanted to do something that will shift that narrative and shift that idea to something more positive and encouraging.”
OUR STORY, OUR VOICE Be it in films, on television or the Internet, black women characters are often portrayed as struggling or being abused or criminalized, she points out. “And, all of these things are true, but I wanted to do something that shifted that idea. There is something very specific that happens when we are controlling the story and we get to frame the narrative and tell the story from our point of view in our own voice. That already puts us in a position of power.”
HOW IT ALL STARTED Her two passions—literature and celebrating black womanhood—culminated in her first installation in 2015. She laid out around 100 books on a brownstone stoop in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood in Brooklyn, eager and unsure of how people would react to it. She’s not looked back since.
Her initial set of books came from her personal collection as well as friends whom she e-mailed, telling them about her new project. “People just started sending me books, and people have been sending me books ever since,” she says. “That was almost five years ago and I get multiple books in the mail every week, from publishers, writers, teachers, strangers from all over the world who found out about the library on Instagram or Facebook, or an article.”
The pop-up library is set up once every month at a new venue. At first, the idea of her library seems deceptively simple—you can take a book from the library by trading it for another one written by a black woman. Talk to Akinmowo and she’ll tell you how it’s not as easy as it sounds. Even people who claim to be bibliophiles are often stumped when they have to bring in books written by black women.
SHIFTING YOUR VANTAGE POINT One day, Akinmowo, opened the pages of Alice Walker’s The Color Purple. As a black woman, black girl, she remembers identifying with it immediately. The very first page of the book spoke to her, quite unlike the works of authors she had read previously—Chaucer, Hemingway, Melville or even Sylvia Plath. “I feel like it just turns on a different part of your brain, and once that part of you is turned on, it can’t be turned off.”
What started as a personal discovery of books by incredible black women such as Toni Morrison, Zora Neale Hurston, Audre Lorde, and Bell Hooks among many others, is now a flourishing literary art project, spawning others of its kind around the country. “I want to amplify the voices of these writings so that more people know and understand that there’s all this intelligence out here, all this creativity out here.”
The library, she notes, gives people access to books and writers they may have never heard of. “It also helps people understand that it’s important to expand your worldview and one of the easiest ways to do that is to read books by different types of people. If you are only reading one thing, you are only going to get one perspective.”
People, she senses, are receptive to that idea. “I think people want more diversity. People want change. They want things to be mixed up. People don’t want to see status quo anymore. People are hungry for something different.”
TO MARKET, TO MARKET African-American women, she asserts, spend a lot of money on books. “Statistics show that we are a huge market when it comes to literature,” she says, adding that once publishing companies figure that out, it will be to their benefit. They are already playing a more active role in catering and marketing to them, she says, creating books and imprints specifically for them.
For black women, reading books written by them, for them and with them in mind, can also be an act of resistance. “There are different aspects of reading,” she explains. There’s the politics of reading: Making a conscious choice to read specific books by specific people. And, there’s the pleasure of reading. “I feel like black women as readers are coming from both those points. We are being politicized and we are also choosing books for political reasons. But, also there’s the pleasure of reading a book and seeing yourself in the story. And, because this is a capitalist economy, I think the publishing industry is just going to take advantage of that by giving us more.”
STARTING YOUNG Her visitors include not just women, but also young girls. Having hardly encountered diverse characters herself as a young reader, she observes how there are many more options now. “Right now, there are so many amazing books out there for children of color,” she notes. With a little research, she says, you should be able to find books written by black authors and authors of color for children of every age group. That, however, does not mean there is enough. “I also think you can have more. I don’t think we can ever have too much. But there’s definitely a lot out there.” Though she’s not counted, she estimates having between 500-600 children’s and young adult books in her library.
“It’s exciting for a little brown girl to see a book where there’s a little brown girl in it, maybe riding the subway or making lunch for her mom.” When the young girl realizes that the book has been written by someone like her, it’s really affirming, she points out. Other than fiction, creative non-fiction as a genre can be both engaging and empowering, she feels. Complete with illustrations, children learn about the lives of powerful historical figures such as Harriet Tubman or Sojourner Truth in a way that doesn’t feel like a lecture, she says.
“Not only do they get to see themselves as writers and creators, they [also] get to see that there’s a large diversity of interest. They learn about the fact that their blackness is not just about one thing. Blackness is not a monolith. There are different ways to be black, and there’s different ways to express your black culture and be proud of your black selves. You can do it through music, sport, fashion, activism, art, performance, science. They’re getting to see all those different layers, and they can plug into wherever their interest lies,” she explains.
It shatters the idea that black people don’t do this or that. Talking about how it opens up opportunities for black children and children of color, she says it shows children how someone did it in the past. “You can do it like that too or maybe you’ll come up with your own way.”
LOVE, LABOR, AND LEGACY As she works to secure a grant to set up a permanent location for her library, and maybe even get a bookmobile, her idea has now snowballed into a movement, with Free Black Women’s Libraries cropping up in cities such as Los Angeles and Detroit among other places.
She credits iconic African-American librarians such as Dorothy B. Porter and Mayme Agnew Clayton for inspiring her and says she is only continuing their legacy. “There’s a long list of black women librarians that I look up to, who have done what I’m doing right now. But, for them, it was even more significant because when they were doing it, there was no social media, no Internet. They were just digging through. Part of what I hope is that I’m making my ancestors proud by doing this work,” she says.
“When I think about the sweat and the labor of moving the books from one place to another, I think about them,” she says, “doing this at a time when blackness was seen as something that was ignorant and illiterate, and reading and writing was illegal or not allowed or considered wrong, just wrong. Black librarians are amazing.”
* * * * * *
Ola Ronke Akinmowo’s recommendations for young readers:
Piecing Me Together by Renee Watson
My Life as an Ice-Cream Sandwich by Ibi Zoboi
Pet by Akwaeke Emezi
The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo
One Crazy Summer by Rita Williams-Garcia
* * * * * *
Asha Sridhar is a freelance writer based out of Jersey City. She loves wandering through old historic buildings, bustling streets and anything that closely resembles a bookshop.
Source: https://diversebooks.org/the-free-black-womens-library-celebrates-black-authors-and-readers
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Carolyn Lazard’s video Crip Time makes me think we could resolve the politics of disclosure if we could rely on structures of access. What makes me anxious about disclosure is shame and stigma and discomfort with taking up space, but it’s also a consequence of asking for what I need and being met with pity, disgust, and disbelief and no material change. What if I redirected all the energy spent performing okayness for the comfort of others and put it to work generating new systems and habits of access? Banging on the walls of institutions is exhausting and maybe if we do it together it will be easier? On Saturday come to a discussion about collective care networks with Ted Kerr (What Would An HIV Doula Do?), filmmaker Lana Lin, and Ola Ronke Akinmowo (The Free Black Women’s Library), and Kevin Gotkin (Disability Arts Council) ✨ Saturday, March 2, 3-5, FREE ✨ @efaprojectspace is accessible by elevator ✨ please be scent free ✨ (at EFA Project Space) https://www.instagram.com/p/BueJyjSgz0X/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1u761atpqvv4p
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[#WELLNESS] Harriet's Apothecary Spring 2017 Edition Healing Village: Spring Edition 2017 Sunday, April 23rd | 12-7pm MINKA Brooklyn | 1120 Washington Ave, Brooklyn, New York 11225 Admission: Suggested donation for entry $5-$20 *No one will be turned away for lack of funds. To register, visit https://docs.google.com/forms/d/14PFq. For more information, visit harrietsapothecary.com Facebook event page: facebook.com/events/110714129470739/
BEATBOX BOTANICALS welcomes you to HARRIET’S APOTHECARY HEALING VILLAGE: SPRING EDITION 2017Harriet’s Apothecary is an intergenerational, healing village led by the brilliance and wisdom of Black Cis Women, Queer and Trans healers, artists, health professionals, magicians, activists and ancestors. We are committed to co-creating accessible, affordable, liberatory, all-body loving, all-gender honoring, community healing spaces that recognize, inspire, and deepen the healing genius of people who identify as Black, Indigenous and People of color and the allies that love us.
The intention of Harriet’s Apothecary is to continue the rich healing legacy of abolitionist, community nurse and herbalist Harriet Tubman. Like our courageous ancestor, we expand and deepen access to health and healing resources that support our community, specifically Black, Indigenous and PoC folks and the allies that love us, in our healing journeys toward freedom. We also connect individuals and communities to accessible self and community based resources that are rooted in the wisdom of our bodies, our ancestors and our plant families. We imagine our healing village as another manifestation of Harriet Tubman’s underground railroad to freedom bolstering liberation in our bodies and within our communities.
Rooted in the resilient and oppressive experiences of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color, who actively resist dehumanization, we co-created Harriet’s Apothecary as an intentional response to the violence that our community faces every day and as an ode of love and reverence to our vast possibilities of imagination, interdependence and liberation.We envision generations and lifetimes of folks of color engaging in their dignity, power and vast connection to that which liberates our souls free. We desire deep connection to our capacity to heal, to love and to transform for the sake of justice and freedom.We are proud to be manifesting this work with you and feel so humbled and deeply honored by your trust and partnership.
Our village is an intentional space for self-identified POC/Indigenous/Mixed-Race Cis Women, Queer and Trans folks and the allies that love them.
We will offer free to sliding scale, body-affirming, love-drenched potions, prescriptions and customized individual and group healing spaces to restore and expand our community’s abilities to transform the impacts of white supremacy, patriarchy, imperalism, colonization and heal trauma. Offerings include indigenous sound healing, embodied movement, somatics bodywork, acupressure, art-making, thai yoga massage, reiki, arts-based herbalism, intuitive divinatory, face painting, plant based medicine making, healing haircuts, spiritual divinations, peer to peer counseling sessions, guided meditation, healing justice workshops, internalized oppression healing cyphers and more. We will also center our HARRIET’S APOTHECARY FREEDOM SCHOOL! featuring interactive, creative, community workshops, strategy sessions, dialogues and skillshares that will offer folks tangible tools to deepen our individual and collective healing powers and skills. We will explore historical and present day indigenous stories and tools of wellness, safety and care outside of the medical industrial complex.
Harriet’s Apothecary is committed to being a part of a long legacy of healers who center healing in social justice work for the sake of liberating our bodies and our communities. Our shared goal is to create dynamic healing spaces that support Black, Indigenous and PoC folks in connecting with a deeper sense of resilience, self worth, acceptance, transformative healing, inspiration and imagination to liberate injustice in our tissues and within the spaces we occupy. This necessary tactic of engaging with our own individual and collective healing endorses our lives whole. It reclaims that which has been taken from us and strengthens and enriches our possibilities of survival and in turn the dynamic capacities of liberation and transformation.
◄ ◄ ◄HARRIET’S APOTHECARY HEALERS & FREEDOM SCHOOL WARRIORS ► ► ► HARRIET TUBMAN Adaku Utah Beatrice Anderson Jasmine Burems Juliette Jones Julia Bennett Kiyan Williams Naima Penniman Naimah Johnson Natalie Sablon Ola Ronke Selome Araya Shamilia McBean Shiwan Moonwannie Taja Lindley Tiffany Lenoi
◄ ◄ ◄ACCESSIBILITY ► ► ► We strive to ensure that Harriet’s Apothecary is accessible and welcoming to our community. If you have access needs and/or need support in attending Harriet’s Apothecary in the fullness of your being, please email [email protected] . Also feel free to indicate your needs in the registration form.
Directions: Take the Q, B train to Prospect Park. Head east on Lefferts Avenue toward Washington Ave. Turn left onto Washington Avenue.
This building is a wheelchair accessible. There are elevators in the building to go from floor to floor.We will have designated scent-safer spaces at Harriet’s Apothecary.Please be scent/fragrance-free to the extent that you are able to, so that beloved community members with chemical sensitivities can attend Harriet’s Apothecary. If you need support being scent/fragrence-free feel free to contact us at [email protected]
Bathrooms at Harriet’s Apothecary are designated All Gender.
We are working on providing free childcare. Please register for Harriet’s Apothecary Spring Edition by April 18 if you need childcare. Also provide how many children will be attending with you and if they have access needs.Please support us in making Harriet’s Apothecary more accessible to more people each season. If you have feedback, questions, or suggestions, or want to volunteer or help organize around access, please email [email protected].
#Harriet's Apothecary#wellness#spiritual healing#minka brooklyn#brooklyn#circle of sisters#black women healers#healing circle#BEATBOX BOTANICALS
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Take a look at David Adjaye’s sketchbook, Ola Ronke Akinmowo’s black female writers, Andrea Zittel in seclusion and weird works from Brad Phillips and David Shrigley.
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Iyonu Ogo 2018 Latest Yoruba Movie
Iyonu Ogo 2018 Latest Yoruba Movie
Iyonu Ogo story of two brothers on each others throat over who gets what. A movie that will keep you watching from Beginning to the end.
Starring Femi Adebayo, Yomi Fash Lanso, Ronke oshodi Oke, Adebayo Salami, Tunde Ola Yusuf, Hakeem Adebayo and many more.
Download Iyonu Ogo Latest Yoruba Movie
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Last week Sunday, I met with some members of the Black August Cocoon Collective that Ola Ronke of Free Black Women’s Library started for the month of August as a way to bring together a community of black woman to do a series of activities and rituals that will later result in us creating a zine.
Since the Sunday coincided with a new full moon in Leo, Ola had each of us pick a card from Earthlyn Manuel’s Black Angels Card deck. The card I got was the Joker. At first I thought that was strange because I don’t think I’m much of a funny person or a jokester, but I have been studying trickster archetypes and gods like Eshu/Elegba, I do love word play when it comes to my writing practice and as the book explanation says, I seem to have a liveliness that attracts others to me.
Take a look at the card and read the description for it (click on the pictures for full size):
Zenju Earthlyn Manuel, as she calls herself, has updated the oracle cards and you can find out more about them here.
I do have a love for the artistry of tarot cards/oracle cards and I want to start a collection. Currently I have Abiola Abrams’ Affirmation Cards with its collection of various African goddesses.
Since then Abiola has added to her first set of oracle cards with Womanifesting! Fertility Goddess Affirmation Cards, which I’m looking forward to getting soon.
With these sets of oracle cards, I wonder what other black and Afro-diasporic centered tarot cards and oracle cards existed out there. Below is a list of the ones I found:
Black Power Tarot Cards
Via Hoodwitch:
“From the visionary mind of King Khan was born the idea to celebrate Black Power using the mystic language of Tarot. He chose 26 African American people whom he felt followed a true path of illumination despite being born in a country that was so corrupt and vehemently against them.”
The tarot card deck, which was given a sign of approval from filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky, is a version of the Tarot De Marseilles and it features an array of black activists, public figures, comedians, musicians and important historic figures. Some of the figures include Malcolm X, Tina Turner, Little Richard, Richard Pryor, James Brown, Chuck Berry, Howlin’ Wolf, and Sister Rosetta Tharpe.
Pictures Credit to Dangerous Minds
You can purchase the tarots and other items from King Khan here as well.
There are other tarot card decks: African Tarot, African American Tarot, Healing Earth Tarot, New Orleans Voodoo Tarot, Afro-Brasilian Tarot and African Playing Cards deck.
Most of these are older tarots, but today’s artists are creating newer versions too, either as actual tarot card decks or as artworks only. For example, the recent Afropunk version of the tarot by Khalid Rosemin.
Another was a photograph version of the classic Rider-Waite tarot deck of 78 cards featuring a Haitian art collective, Atis Rezistans, who worked with a white woman photographer, Alice Smeets for the project. Although I’m on the fence with the title The Ghetto Tarot, the video below allows the collective to explain their reason behind naming it such and the project gives another perspective to look at how the tarot can be done. Read more about the project.
https://vimeo.com/126302208
Pictures Credit to Dangerous Minds
Artist Courtney Alexander recently created the Dust II Onyx tarot card deck and the deck is one of the most gorgeous that I have seen. It completely reimagines the tarot and as it is called a melanated tarot deck, it celebrates the diverse beauty of blackness.
https://vimeo.com/183264347
Monroe Rodriguez Singh also wanted to celebrate the beauty of the diaspora specifically centered on Afro-Caribbean mythologies and spiritualities, so he is creating the Espiritismo/Vudu tarot card deck.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/vudutarot/espiritismo-tarot-art-cards-extended
I hope you have enjoyed this journey through Afro-centered oracle and tarot cards! What do you think? What are some of your favorite decks? Do you know of any decks that I didn’t mention here?
Art of This World: Tarot/Oracle Cards Last week Sunday, I met with some members of the Black August Cocoon Collective that Ola Ronke of Free Black Women's Library started for the month of August as a way to bring together a community of black woman to do a series of activities and rituals that will later result in us creating a zine.
#African Diaspora#African diasporic religions#African diasporic spirituality#African spirituality#art#Artists#Black Spirituality#Oracle Cards#Spirituality#Tarot#Tarot Cards
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@thefreeblackwomenslibrary & @WomenWriteBloom are 2017 @bkartscouncil grantees! So beautiful to connect with Ola Ronke, whose work I so admire, at tonight's BAC ceremony! #BlackGirlMagic #WeBloom (at Brooklyn Borough Hall)
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#Repost @manchildblack with @repostapp ・・・ (((TODAY - WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11th, from 2pm-3pm))) ON AIR w/THE BLACKS returns to WBAI 99.5 FM New York!!! Join The Illustrious Blacks (Manchildblack+Monstah Black) as they celebrate #BlackGirlMagic with special guests: Sara Devine (recording artist/singer/songwriter), Nucomme Nucomme Nucomme (singer/songwriter/musician), Ola Ronke (The Free Black Women's Library) & Le'Asha Julius (singer/songwriter/musician)! Tune into 99.5 FM or www.wbai.org at 2pm. #LiveTheHypeLife #WBAI
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@dreamhampton directs this beautiful, fierce, sexy BlackWoman AFFIRMING music video. Ola Ronke does an exquisite job with set-design... And I LOVE the artistsTHEESatisfaction-- "QueenS" This song is HOT!!!!
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