What a performance. Tracey's art is created with a wonderful sense of courage and danger. She has that Ali G quality - who knows what will come from her outspoken works of honesty?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00s8lp8/The_Tutu_Talks_Are_Women_Strong_Enough_to_Lead_Africa/ Archbishop Desmond Tutu brings together Africa's leading contemporary thinkers in a series of discussions exploring major issues and changes affecting the future of the continent. Tutu asks his guests - Patricia De Lille, Pregs Govender, Mbuyiselo Botha, and Nomboniso Gasa - why women in Africa, despite years of struggle and hardship, still do not possess the same freedoms and rights as men. Are arguments about cultural difference and tradition allowing brutal acts of oppression against women to be ignored or excused? Do men in Africa fear their identities or power will be eroded if women have greater equality? What does the political victory of Ellen-Johnson Sirleaf in Liberia tell us about the possibilities for real change? Broadcast on: BBC Four, 10:00pm Tuesday 27th April 2010 Duration: 30 minutes Available until: 10:29pm Thursday 6th May 2010 Categories: Factual , Politics
Museum for African Art, looking south along Fifth Avenue . Rendering by Neoscape. Source: Art Daily | http://www.artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=37617 NEW YORK, NY.- Elsie McCabe Thompson, President, the Museum for African Art , announced that the Museum—one of the country’s premier gateways to the arts and cultures of Africa and the African Diaspora—will reopen to the public in its major new facility in April 2011. Designed by the renowned New York City firm Robert A.M. Stern Architects, LLP, the new building is located at 1280 Fifth Avenue, at East 110th Street, in Manhattan. There it will join “Museum Mile,” linking this prestigious row of museums with Harlem, one of the country’s most important centers of historic and contemporary African-American culture. (The Museum is currently closed to the public, and is operating out of temporary quarters in Queens, New York.) The Museum for African Art’s new home comprises four floors (one below grade) of ...
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