Harlem Beat Pops-up Downtown

DJ Pauly Smallz at Scratch Academy for Harlem Beat art show.

Art in FLUX uses pop-up strategies to raise awareness about Harlem artists with opening nights and interactive events. Recently, they ventured downtown to partner with Scratch Academy for Harlem Beat, an exhibit featuring four diverse artists. The show runs through June 14, at Scratch DJ Academy, 32 Cooper Square, 2nd floor, www.scratch.com.

“By bringing art to Scratch Academy we are aiming for a transformative experience at this premiere DJ school founded by the late Jam Master Jay and Rob Principe. We love mixing art with the unexpected,” said Leanne Stella, Art in FLUX founder.

Think about it. Would you expect to find an art gallery in a Hip Hop DJ academy? An element of surprise is the key ingredient for a successful pop-up. The goal is to create tremendous buzz and connection. This random yet targeted marketing approach is designed to be short-term. What a fun way to explore and be exposed to new artists!

The opening event on May 8, was a huge success as visitors streamed in all night. Scratch students, alumni and visitors were treated to art works expressed in digital painting, photography, graffiti, and paint. Each artist’s imagination “pulsed to the beat of their Harlem neighborhoods and is reflected in their work through musical, creative, and historical contexts,” Stella added.

Congrats to artists: Makeba Rainey, Tyson Hall, Ibou Ndoye, and Anya Roz.

“Urban Noise” painted guitar by Ibou Ndoye.

 

 

Also, congrats to Scratch Academy’s DJ Pauly Smallz who displayed great DJ skills.

More photos can be viewed on the gallery’s Face Book page: https://www.facebook.com/artinfluxharlem?directed_target_id=0

About Pop-up strategy:  The key to a successful pop-up event,  is to put your “store,” event, or product someplace where you would least expect it. These short-lived ventures can last a weekend or several months. Pop-ups are becoming the best low-cost way to set-up a temporary “store,” beyond the website, to create buzz, word-of-mouth marketing, develop an audience and generate sales and support.

 

 

 

 

Makeba Rainey poses with her art.

 

Memorial Day

Camden Sophisticated Sisters Drill Team to star at Brooklyn Memorial Day Parade.

The Camden Sophisticated Sisters Drill Team, a youth group that starred on Dancing with the Stars, was saluted by Beyonce on a video, and featured with Robin Roberts on  ABC News, will headline the Second Annual Black Veterans for Social Justice (BVSJ) Memorial Day Parade, Monday, May 27, 2013, 11am.

The event is set for Restoration Plaza, the home of the Billie Holiday Theater, at 1360 Fulton Street in the Bedford Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn. They will be joined by praying grandmothers, jazz musicians, elected officials and other noted community leaders who will gather to honor our fallen military troops.

“Yesterday, today and tomorrow we serve our veterans with tender loving care and a listening ear,” said Wendy McClinton, BVSJ, CEO and president.

“We are thrilled to host the parade again and hope that this is the continuation of an annual tradition. We welcome everyone to join us as we pay tribute to our fallen soldiers,” said the leader of this community organization founded in 1979 to serve veterans, families and community.

The parade will march down Marcy Avenue from Restoration to BVSJ’s headquarters on Willoughby Avenue. A Color Guard, guest speakers and a processional will highlight the program.

Before the parade gets rolling, Assemblywoman Annette Robinson will give opening greetings with participation by Councilwoman Leticia James. At the end of the parade a community barbecue will be held including more guest speakers and closing remarks from Councilman Charles Barron; Assemblyman Walter T. Mosley; Bill de Blasio, NYC Public Advocate; and Dr. Eugene Mathiew, NYC’s first Haitian-born Councilman.

The following groups are expected: Praying Grandmothers; Soul Tigers Marching Band, Brooklyn for Peace, United War Veterans Council, National Association for Black Veterans (NAVVETS); Central Brooklyn Jazz Consortium; National Association of Negro Business & Professional Women’s Club, National Association of Black Military Women, and Kan-Cobra, a Karate Group. Everyone is welcome. Go to www.bvsj.org.

Transit Veterans

Transit Veteran Association (TVA) program, Friday, May 24, Vietnam Memorial Park, 55 Water Street, NYC, Noon.

Transit Veterans Association (TVA) will kick-off the Memorial Day Weekend with a special program open to MTA employees, retirees and the general public, on May 24, at the Vietnam Veteran Memorial Park, 55 Water Street, in Lower Manhattan. TVA’s ceremony usually draws a large crowd because of its proximity to the tragedy of 9/11 at Ground Zero and the tributes made to fallen soldiers in all the wars. Attendees are advised to be prompt as it is open seating.

Some visitors who attend dress in military uniforms and some bring photos of lost ones who perished in the ashes on 9/11. For Gold Star Mothers and Wounded Warriors, the Vietnam Memorial Park site is a sacred place for peace and reflection.

MTA CEO, Thomas S. Prendergast; NYCT President, Carmen Bianco; Darryl Irick, chief executive, Regional Buses Operations; NYC Police Commissioner, Raymond Kelly; FDNY Commissioner Salvatore Cassano, and DCAS Commissioner, Edna Wells Handy, and other NYC officials are expected to attend.

Color Guards and Transit Bagpipers will lead a processional. Members of the Tuskegee Airmen are also expected to participate in the ceremony. (Several Airmen were MTA retirees!)

TVA Memorial Day ceremonies will also be held at other locations throughout the transit system in the outer boroughs, as many of the employees and retirees are veterans. These smaller ceremonies may include music, banners, moments of silence or a designated time to do salutes. All activities are planned with the utmost care so as to not interfere with transit operations and delivery of service to the public.

Memorial Day, a time to remember fallen soldiers.

NYC Area Parades, May 27, 2013

The City will continue to honor our fallen heroes with parades and events throughout the weekend all over the five boroughs. The Little Neck–Douglaston parade in Queens is called the largest. Brooklyn’s Memorial Day Parade (the oldest at over 145 years old!) begins at 87th Street and Third Avenue. African American veterans, sponsored by Black Veterans for Social Justice (BVSJ) will be featured in the Brooklyn parade at Restoration Plaza, 1360 Fulton Street, Bedford Stuyvesant. In Manhattan, a smaller Inwood Parade, begins at Dyckman Street and Broadway. Check the City’s events calendar for a full list of events.

Basic Holiday Information: Memorial Day, a U.S. Federal Holiday, is celebrated on Monday, May 27, 2013. Schools, banks and post offices are closed. Most restaurants, stores and events are open. Memorial Day Weekend marks the unofficial start of summer.

Vietnam Memorial Park, TVA Memorial Day event, Friday, May 24, 2013, Noon,

Other Memorial Day Events in NYC: The NY Philharmonic will play a free concert at St. John the Divine at 8 p.m. Go to: Free Memorial Day Concert Details; Memorial Day Weekend events at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum; and the Metropolitan Museum of Art is open on Memorial Day as part of the special Met Holiday Mondays sponsored by NYC Mayor Mike Bloomberg.

Military Monday: Memorial Day – African American Origins

WWll veterans: My father, Alfred Burton Smith (r) and his brothers, Joseph (l) and John Baptiste (center). May they rest in peace on Memorial Day.

The first Memorial Day or Decoration Day (decorating soldiers’ graves with flowers) has its origins with African American former slaves in Low Country, South Carolina. Thank you South Carolina Sisters and Brothers! Like most Civil War topics, this holiday has a lot to do with memories lost and whitewashed. Even on mainstream websites, false credit is given to women’s history—that Memorial Day was somehow an idea created by a military officer’s wife.

But thanks to Yale professor David W. Blight who authored American Oracle: Civil War in the Civil Rights Era, and NY Times article, we are able to verify what genealogists and African American oral historians have been whispering for eons about the true origins of Memorial Day.

Memorial Day (originally called Decoration Day) is a day of remembrance for those who have died in service to the United States.

Learn about the African American origins of this American holiday according to a New York Times article excerpt by Professor David W. Blight:

Military graves decorated with American flags in honor of Memorial day.

“The procession was led by 3,000 black schoolchildren carrying armloads of roses and singing the Union marching song “John Brown’s Body.” Several hundred black women followed with baskets of flowers, wreaths and crosses. Then came black men marching in cadence, followed by contingents of Union infantrymen. Within the cemetery enclosure a black children’s choir sang “We’ll Rally Around the Flag,” the “Star-Spangled Banner” and spirituals before a series of black ministers read from the Bible.

After the dedication the crowd dispersed into the infield and did what many of us do on Memorial Day: enjoyed picnics, listened to speeches and watched soldiers drill. Among the full brigade of Union infantrymen participating were the famous 54th Massachusetts and the 34th and 104th United States Colored Troops, who performed a special double-columned march around the gravesite.

The war was over, and Memorial Day had been founded by African-Americans in a ritual of remembrance and consecration. The war, they had boldly announced, had been about the triumph of their emancipation over a slaveholders’ republic. They were themselves the true patriots.

Despite the size and some newspaper coverage of the event, its memory was suppressed by white Charlestonians in favor of their own version of the day. From 1876 on, after white Democrats took back control of South Carolina politics and the Lost Cause defined public memory and race relations, the day’s racecourse origin vanished.

Indeed, 51 years later, the president of the Ladies’ Memorial Association of Charleston received an inquiry from a United Daughters of the Confederacy official in New Orleans asking if it was true that blacks had engaged in such a burial rite in 1865; the story had apparently migrated westward in community memory. Mrs. S. C. Beckwith, leader of the association, responded tersely, “I regret that I was unable to gather any official information in answer to this.”

Here is the link of the full story:

. Forgetting Why We Remember – NYTimes.com

www.nytimes.com/2011/05/30/opinion/30blight.html?pagewanted=all

Funny Friday: Harlem Elvis Ladies

Elvis ladies outside Harlem’s Apollo’s Theater

Funny Friday. I really don’t know why they were there. And, I didn’t ask. But, there they were.  I could not resist. I struck a pose with them. Elvis look-alikes come in all sizes, ages, nationalities and genders.

Some Elvis tribute artists—most Elvis fans hate the word “impersonator”– were gathered outside of Harlem’s Apollo Theater recently one fine afternoon.

Maybe they knew that Geri Allen & Friends had just finished their show “Celebrate the Great Jazz Women of the Apollo” show that I had just attendees with friends and family.

Maybe they were there because it was the day before Mother’s Day. Or, maybe it’s getting near summer when everything Elvis pops out, even in Harlem. August will mark the 36th year of his transition.  So stay tuned for more pelvis-swiveling, jump-suited Elvis look-alikes coming to your neighborhood too.

Do you have a Funny Friday story?