Ava DuVernay‘s collective ARRAY keeps on amplifying voices and artists to help push systemic change and representation with the release of W.J. Lofton’s Breonna Taylor-inspired visual poem Would You ...
Filmmaker Ava DuVernay counts herself as one of the many people inspired by W.J. Lofton’s powerful visual poem “We Ask For Fire”—in which he repeats the words, “the cops who murdered Breonna Taylor ...
*Refers to the latest 2 years of stltoday.com stories. Cancel anytime. Poetry Scores (poetryscores.blogspot.com) has been toying with a work by Missouri's poet laureate, David Clewell, translating it ...
When creative director Steven Yee, 32, planned his wedding in 2020, he knew exactly which song he would choose for the mother-son dance. After all, he’d been thinking about it since he was 15 years ...
Bestselling author and poet Elizabeth Acevedo follows up her acclaimed YA novels, including The Poet X and Clap When You Land, with Inheritance: A Visual Poem, a small-format picture book illustrated ...
The most well-known spoken word poem from National Poetry Slam Champion Elizabeth Acevedo comes alive in the brand-new illustrated book called, Inheritance: A Visual Poem. Paired with vivid, ...
The subject of the film Voices of the Spirit: A Visual Poem is the 2015 Voices of the Spirit V concert. Filmmakers and Folklore Film principals Marlon Hall and Danielle Fanfair create Visual Poems, ...
When winter comes, the world holds its breath. Snow drapes the earth in silence, and light softens like a secret kept close. Let yourself be still, let yourself listen — the quiet of winter speaks ...
"Remember the sky you were born under. Know each of the star's stories..." This is a must watch 3-minute visual poem short film from the Sun Valley Writers' Conference 2021. They commissioned a set of ...
qathet-based artists Whitney La Fortune and Jo Forrest collaborated together for the Arts and Words Festival, which took ...
An experimental visual poem combining film, animation, photography, and archival footage inviting people to occupy the Black Body and examine the lived Black experience for a brief moment.