Saturday, April 18, 2015
Saturday, April 11, 2015
Sketchbook Saturday
This is a charcoal sketch I did in 1992. I still love working with charcoal because I like to smudge it for a smooth texture. I used to do my hair like this a lot so it may actually be a self portrait (kind of). It was also how Janet Jackson did her hair in the Pleasure Principle video so maybe I was trying to draw her. Not sure now!
Saturday, April 4, 2015
Sketchbook Saturday
This week is a four-in-one! I don't know exactly when these are from since they are just labled 1990s in the file. I had kept my hair shoulder length or longer when I was in my teens but was considering chopping it all off into some cute short cut. The drawings below are of some ideas I had of what I wanted to maybe do. The first two I think were what I thought one cut would look either curly or hot ironed. Notice the rat tail on the third one! I changed my mind and kept it long because I just loved my hair too much!
Wednesday, April 1, 2015
National Poetry Month 2015 - The Harlem Renaissance - William Stanley Braithwaite
Poet, William Stanley Braithwaite |
~~~
From Wikipedia:
William Stanley Beaumont Braithwaite (December 6, 1878 – June 8, 1962) was an American writer, poet and literary critic.
Braithwaite was born in Boston, Massachusetts. At the age of 12, upon the death of his father, Braithwaite was forced to quit school to support his family. When he was aged 15 he was apprenticed to a typesetter for the Boston publisher, Ginn & Co., where he discovered an affinity for lyric poetry and began to write his own poems.
From 1906 to 1931 he contributed to The Boston Evening Transcript, eventually becoming its literary editor. He also wrote articles, reviews and poetry for many other periodicals and journals, including the Atlantic Monthly, the New York Times, and the The New Republic.
In 1918 he was awarded the Spingarn Medal by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
In 1935, Braithwaite assumed a professorship of creative literature at Atlanta University. He retired from Atlanta University in 1945.
In 1946, he and his wife Emma Kelly, along with their seven children, moved to Sugar Hill—a neighborhood in Harlem, New York—where Braithwaite continued to write and publish poetry, essays and anthologies. He died at his 409 Edgecombe Avenue home in Harlem after a brief illness on 8 June 1962.
Braithwaite published three volumes of his own poetry:
Lyrics of Life and Love (1904)
The House of Falling Leaves (1908)
Selected Poems (1948)
Braithwaite edited numerous poetry anthologies over the course of his career. The Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library at the University of Virginia holds forty boxes of manuscripts, correspondence, and other related materials related mainly to this editorial work, in three separate Braithwaite collections.
~~~
BLAH
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)