Natasha Marin
Natasha Marin bụ onye na-ese ihe na Seattle, ónyé na-ede uri, na ónyé na-eme ihe ike nke nwere mgbọrọgwụ na Trinidad na Canada, ónyé ọrụ ya na-elekwasị anya na ndị mmadụ, ọbọdọ, na ọgwụgwọ.[1][2][3][4] A maara ya nke ọma maka ọrụ ya Reparations (ebe nrụọrụ weebụ), nke nwetara nlebara anya mba na 2016, yana màkà ọrụ nka ya na akwụkwọ a na-akpọ BLACK IMAGINATION, nke McSweeney bipụtara.[5][6][7] Marin bụ onye isi ndụmọdụ maka NONWHITEWORKS, ma depụta ya dị ka otu n'ime ụmụ nwanyị 30 "Run This City" site na magazin Seattle Metropolitan na 2018.[8] Marin bụ ónyé guzobere Seattle People of Color Salon (SPoCS).
Echiche Ndị Ojii
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]Black Imagination bụ ọrụ nka echiche nke Marin na akwụkwọ nke otu aha ahụ. Ọrụ ahụ malitere site na ihe ngosi nka na Jenụwarị 2018 nke akpọrọ ŌBlack Imagination: The States of Matter,ʹ na CORE Gallery na Seattle. Ihe ngosi ahụ sochiri ihe ngosi abụọ ọzọ n'okpuru aha Black Imagination: ŌThe (g)The (g). Nke ọ bụla n'ime ihe ngosi nka atọ dabeere na ọdịyo, nke echiche na gbụrụ-gbúrụ Seattle ka e mere iji gbasaa, etiti, ma jide ihe ngosi dị iche iche nke olu ojii.[3] Ọrụ ahụ gàrà n'ihu n'ụdị akwụkwọ uri, ntụgharị uche, na akụkọ nke Marin haziri nke a na-akpọ 意 BLACK IMAGINATION: Black Voices on Black Futures. E wepụtara akwụkwọ ahụ na Hugo House na Seattle na Jenụwarị 2020, McSweeney bipụtara ya na Febụwarị 2020.[9][10] Akwụkwọ ahụ nwetara nlebara ányà mbà, na The Paris Review na-ekwu, olu iri atọ na isii dị n'akwụkwọ ahụ na-ada ụda n'onwe ha ma nwee ike miri emi mgbè Marin jikọtara ọnụ.[7] A tụleghachikwara akwụkwọ ahụ na Los Angeles Review ma Jason Reynolds tụrụ aro ya na PBS NewsHour .[10][11] A gbara Marin ajụjụ ọnụ banyéré akwụkwọ ahụ na KUOW-FM Forum: Black voices, origins, and futures, na KEXP-FM, SãoSound & Vision: Natasha Marin na Black Imaginations, zuru ezu na ndepụta nke akụkọ mmalite site na akwụkwọ ahụ.[12][2]
Edensibia
[dezie | dezie ebe o si]- ↑ Marin (2009). "Adolescence, or Through the Fire". Feminist Studies 35 (3): 523–523. ISSN 0046-3663.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Fox (August 30, 2020). Sound & Vision: Natasha Marin on Black Imaginations. KEXP. Retrieved on November 21, 2020.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Beason. "Joy, peace feed black revolution in artist Natasha Marin’s new West Seattle exhibit", The Seattle Times, August 20, 2018. Retrieved on November 21, 2020.
- ↑ Imperial. "Artist Natasha Marin flips the script with Black Joy", Crosscut, August 23, 2018. Retrieved on November 21, 2020.
- ↑ Ng. "Artist launches Reparations website and ‘social experiment’ on white privilege", The Los Angeles Times, August 4, 2016. Retrieved on November 21, 2020.
- ↑ Harrison (April 24, 2020). Black Imagination: A tool to decolonize one’s mind. Chicago Reader. Retrieved on November 21, 2020.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 (June 18, 2020) "Three Possible Worlds". The Paris Review.
- ↑ 30 More Women Who Run This City. Seattle Met (January 31, 2018). Retrieved on November 21, 2020.
- ↑ Book Launch: Black Imagination by Natasha Marin. Hugo House (January 24, 2020). Retrieved on November 21, 2020.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Spencer. "Review: BLACK IMAGINATION Curated by Natasha Marin". The Los Angeles Review.
- ↑ Brown. "Summer reading lists for young people at a time of crisis", PBS News Hour, June 24, 2020. Retrieved on November 21, 2020.
- ↑ O'Brien. "Speakers forum: Black voices, origins, and futures", KUOW, February 18, 2020. Retrieved on November 21, 2020.