Tag Archives: art

4th Annual Imagine Peacefest photos and videos

More to come, but here’s a taste:


2009 Event Photos

THE AMAZING PEACE TREE

UTAH PEACE JAM

ART WORK CREATED BY SCHOOL CHILDREN AND DISPLAYED BY ROOTS AND SHOOTS

Also view 2009 photos and videos at:

Dignity

MyPeace.TV

Facebook

 

4th Annual Imagine Peacefest

It’s been 4 years since the First Imagine Peacefest. Check it out, this Saturday, September 19th, at noon:

Schedule

Outdoor Plaza (south side of library)

Noon – Opening Ceremony

Noon – 6pm:  Music and other entertainment in the amphitheater

MUSIC FOR PEACE CONCERT

Come hang your wish for peace on the world peace tree!

See the awesome peace jam lineup of prominent local musicians at

Utah Peace Jam!

followed by

DRUMMING FOR PEACE

Drum Circle – 6pm

All invited to participate

Thank you to Gary Stoddard for organizing this part of the event!

Downstairs in Library

noon to 5:00pm ~ Art Display

Thank you to Westminster Roots and Shoots for organizing this part of the event!

Library Auditorium

beginning at 2:30pm

“World Peace” a short film Produced by
Dan Fahndrich Productions  “Creation in Multimedia”
www.danfahndrichproductions.com

followed by:

Our feature film about Erica Fernandez,

an amazing youth who is from Oxnard California and stopped a liquified natural gas plant from being put off the shore in her community.

When Erica found out that a liquefied natural gas facility was proposed
for the coast of Oxnard and Malibu with a 36-inch pipeline routed
through low-income neighborhoods, she was outraged. She worked in
concert with the Sierra Club and Latino No on LNG group to mobilize the
youth and Latino voice in protests and public meetings. She organized
weekly protests at the BHP Billiton offices in Oxnard, met regularly
with community members, marched through neighborhoods that would be most impacted, reached out to the media, and brought more than 250 high
school students to a critical rally. Her passionate testimony at the
California State Lands Commission meeting was quoted in news articles,
and helped convince the Commission to vote to deny the project. Next,
she helped convince the California Coastal Commission to vote 12-0
against the project, and worked on a letter writing and phone call
campaign to the Governor asking him to veto the project, just as the
commissioners did.  Erica’s community organizing and dogged determination played a crucial role in helping her community to resist a multinational billion-dollar corporation.

Property Manager in Salt Lake City attempting to oust residents, local business

The Artspace building has long been a place where artists have been able to reside and work in Salt Lake City on meager incomes. Housed in the building is the local coffee shop A Cup of Joe, which has been open to the artist and peace communities and other progressive groups, opening its doors to events for these groups at little or no cost.

Many of the tenants of Artspace including A Cup of Joe are facing extreme, intolerant and likely illegal action by the new management company Evergreen Management Company. Some section 8 tenants are being told they owe additional money because there is a “problem with their paperwork,” but are not being told what the problem is, or how they can resolve it. Others, including A Cup of Joe, who have had trouble making their rent are not being allowed, per the terms of their leases, to make payment plans. The management company is refusing to return calls from tenants, and summarily turning accounts over for legal action.

Not only is this creating additional financial burden for the tenants, it is emptying the building of artists who form the core of the avant-garde arts community of Salt Lake City. In addition, it is threatening the existence of A Cup of Joe, the anchor of the spoken word poetry community and Salt City Slam, and an important gathering place for progressive groups. Kristy Gonzalez, the current owner, has in particular, reached out to the community and provided a performance space for music and comedy groups, avant-garde theatre, the peace sign birthday party, a memorial service for Sister Maryam Mohammed who was an active artist and musician in our community. Kristy has encouraged the collaging of the tables by community groups, is a pickup point for a Community Sustainable Agriculture farm, a member of the People’s Market and Buy Local First Utah. She has provided space for People for Peace and Justice, local artists and musicians, Guardian Angels, Queer Spirit, the Nine Muses Project. While Joe’s has been near and dear to our hearts for years, Kristy has done so much in the year and a half she has owned Joe’s to make it truly a foundation of the community. We are in danger of losing Joe’s.

What can we do? There are legal costs to be met, and possibly a rent shortfall. Kristy and the other tenants have legal and publicity help at the moment. What Kristy needs is more customers, and community awareness of the problem of losing locally-owned, community-dedicated businesses. Here’s what we can do:

**Talk up Cup of Joe whenever you can.

**Eat and drink at Joe’s as often as you can. Highly recommended are the crepes and the ice cream.

**If you sponsor a community group that has benefited from Joe’s generosity in the past, consider a donation to help them out.

There will be a “marathon community gathering” on July 18 and 19 at Cup of Joe with poets, musicians, artists and local businesses. Details will be published here as soon as they are available.

A Cup of Joe is located at 353 West 200 South in Salt Lake City.

I recently learned that Sister Maryam has passed.  She was well known in Utah and beyond for her artistry in this world.  He and her husband, Jose de Bonilla, sang at Tom and my wedding.  She was an inspiration and I feel blessed to have had her touch our lives.

Here is Sister Maryam and Jose performing at our wedding, October 28, 2001:

A. Maryam Muhammad 1944-2008
Cultural ambassador dies at age 63
Sister Maryam, a ‘cultural ambassador,’ earned acclaim for her music and her life

By Ellen Fagg
The Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated: 02/07/2008 01:24:04 AM MST

Sister A. Maryam Muhammad, an African-American artist, storyteller and musician who became known as the public face of Salt Lake City’s largest Kwanzaa celebration, died of cancer on Jan. 31. She was 63.

She took on a new name when she joined the Muslim faith in the 1970s, but it was her students who gave her the title “Sister.” “It was either Queen, like Queen Latifah, or Sister,” says her husband, Jose Roberto Bonilla. Sister Maryam was the designation that stuck.
Born Carolyn Marie White, she grew up in Houston, Texas, where she was relegated to the back of the bus and banned from using public drinking fountains because of her skin color. These experiences later sparked her inner cultural ambassador.
From Texas, where she was among the first group of black students admitted to the University of Houston, Sister Maryam later moved to Los Angeles. “We met through music,” is how Bonilla describes their first encounter.
At the time, Sister Maryam was starting a folk band and noticed the El Salvadoran man carrying a guitar at the bus stop. “We exchanged numbers, and then I played for her and she liked it. And then I liked her,” he says. The couple were married on June 1, 1981, and eventually had seven children.
The family moved to Salt Lake City in 1994, where Sister Maryam earned an anthropology degree from the University of Utah. In 1997, she and her husband formed the Royal Heritage Ensemble, releasing a handful of CDs, and performed regularly at festivals and in Utah schools. In 2001 and 2002, the group performed in Europe, designated “cultural ambassadors” by the U.S. Department of Defense.
    Sister Maryam’s book about African-American heritage, Our Roots Run Deep, was featured in educational programs at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts, where several of her paintings are part of the museum collection.
    “She was truly a fantastic, vibrant woman, really passionate about art and culture,” said Virginia Catherall, curator of education. “She had a multicultural and global perspective that everybody could experience.”
    Sister Maryam was loved by the children who attended Club U., the university’s summer day camp, said program director Nate Friedman. “She wanted everybody to get along and everybody to accept each other,” says Friedman, who liked her music so much that he invited Sister Maryam and Bonilla to play at his own wedding in 2006. “She wanted to expose everybody to diversity, to expose them to happy thoughts.”
    ellenf@sltrib.com
   
   
   Remembering a sister
   
   A memorial fundraiser for Sister A. Maryam Muhammad will be Feb. 17, 6 to 10 p.m., at A Cup of Joe Cafe, 353 W. 200 South. Details of an April 16 birthday celebration to honor the artist and cultural ambassador will be announced then.
formed the Royal Heritage Ensemble, releasing a handful of CDs, and performed regularly at festivals and in Utah schools. In 2001 and 2002, the group performed in Europe, designated “cultural ambassadors” by the U.S. Department of Defense.
    Sister Maryam’s book about African-American heritage, Our Roots Run Deep, was featured in educational programs at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts, where several of her paintings are part of the museum collection.
    “She was truly a fantastic, vibrant woman, really passionate about art and culture,” said Virginia Catherall, curator of education. “She had a multicultural and global perspective that everybody could experience.”
    Sister Maryam was loved by the children who attended Club U., the university’s summer day camp, said program director Nate Friedman. “She wanted everybody to get along and everybody to accept each other,” says Friedman, who liked her music so much that he invited Sister Maryam and Bonilla to play at his own wedding in 2006. “She wanted to expose everybody to diversity, to expose them to happy thoughts.”
    ellenf@sltrib.com
   
   
   Remembering a sister
   
   A memorial fundraiser for Sister A. Maryam Muhammad will be Feb. 17, 6 to 10 p.m., at A Cup of Joe Cafe, 353 W. 200 South. Details of an April 16 birthday celebration to honor the artist and cultural ambassador will be announced then.

Photos of David Rovics House Party

The David Rovics House Party I helped organize at Free Speech Zone was a huge success.  The room was packed, the food was great, and the concert was superb. Here are some photos:

     
 

David Rovics – photos from tonight’s concert

Tonight’s concert at the U went well. About 50 people attended. Between David‘s sets the Salt Lake City Slam Poets performed. Everyone was aweseome! Here are some photos:
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Image

Political Art

Imagine Peace Festival Today

Saturday, September 23

Outdoor Plaza
Tabling, music (in the amphitheater), information

4th Floor Conference Room
noon to 5:00pm ~ Art Display
2:00 pm ~ Feminist Symposium: “Women and Men Dialogue on Building Community”

Auditorium
12:00 noon ~ Opening Remarks
12:10 ~ One Voice Children’s Choir
12:45 ~ “Hiroshima no Pika” – 15 min animated version of a book for kids about the Hiroshima bombing
1:00 ~ “Radio Burundi” 15 min film about Burundi peace radio
1:30 ~ “Spiritual Motivations for World Peace” – panel discussion
3:00 ~ Film “Voices in Wartime”
4:30 ~ Utah Slammers – poetry

Amphitheater
(All artists’ CD’s will be available as thank you gifts at the information booth)
12noon -12:10:Opening – Pom Poms Not Bomb Bombs
12:15 to 1:00:Andy Monaco
1:15 to 2:00: Leraine Hortsmanshoff
2:15 to 3:00:Gary Stoddard
3:15pm -4:00:Adeitia
4:15-4:30:Scott Fife
4:45pm -5:30:Trace Wiren
5:40-5:55:Pom Poms Not Bomb Bombs

Michael Franti’s Concert

Yesterday was fabulous. I got to the Gallivan Center around 1:00pm with a handful of other folks and by 1:30 had staked out my spot for the first concert in the annual Twilight Concert Series of the season, featuring artist Michael Franti & Spearhead.

The highlight for me was meeting Michael.
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Twilight Concert Series – Michael Franti

Thursday evening I am going to attend the Twilight Concert Series opening concert, featuring Michael Franti & Spearhead:

Michael Franti & Spearheadcreate an ultra-infectious mix of classic soul, funk and hip-hop culminating in a unique and powerful blend. Frontman Michael Franti has been important in the world of music for years, fi rst emerging as a quick-tongued rapper fronting the groundbreaking hip-hop group the Beatnigs, followed by the highly critically acclaimed Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy. Fusing superb musicality with politically-charged lyrics, Michael Franti & Spearhead use their music as a vehicle for social conscience, maintaining a positive attitude while tackling some of today’s most complicated issues. Michael Franti has shared the stage with some of the biggest names in music including Nirvana and U2.

Michael Franti walks the talk. I have admired him for quite awhile. I was priveleged to hear him perform in Park City a couple of years ago. Here is what is documented in Wikipedia:
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