COCO JONES Here We Go (Uh Oh)
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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Monterey Bay Aquarium

Love Begins

Origami Around
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

Product Placement
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
we're not kids anymore.

ellievsbear
d e v o n
occasionally subtle

tannertan36
Xuebing Du
tumblr dot com
RMH
AnasAbdin
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
DEAR READER

#extradirty

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@hypnotiqone
COCO JONES Here We Go (Uh Oh)
Girls dancing to Rufus Thomas during Wattstax, 1972
It's a lovely sculpture and I enjoyed seeing it during a walk today.
"Homage to King," by Barcelona artist Xavier Medina-Campeny, was installed right before the 1996 Olympics.
But as I passed this image of Martin Luther King Jr -- which sits on John Lewis Freedom Parkway -- I couldn't help but wish that both of those tributes could be connected to a place that's not so much of a car-sewer.
How wonderful it would be if Atlanta could become a champion for the growth of walkable, human-scale urbanism with equitable outcomes that allow lower-income people to share in the goodness.
We could become a beacon for other cities to follow.
Yancarlos Jimenez photographed by Jason Hardwock
Corey Alston (Mount Pleasant, SC)
“My name is Corey Alston. I’m a fifth generation Sweetgrass Basket Weaver. I currently run the family business in the Charleston City Market. Sweetgrass Basket Weaving has been a major part of the Gullah Geechee Culture dating back to days of Enslavement. This coastal art form has been recognized as South Carolina State Handcraft and has been known to be kept alive the longest along Sweetgrass Basket Makers HWY of South Carolina. This skill is one of the rare arts of our country that is founded nowhere else in America. Gullah Sweetgrass Baskets are a national treasure.
“Being chosen as one of the artisans of Mt. Pleasant does not only bring awareness to my skill set and my culture as a Gullah Geechee representative, but in collaboration with Acres of Ancestry raises awareness of the unjustifiable treatment that Black and minority farmers have endured. The more that this topic is brought to the forefront, the more that our nation’s leaders will see that treating white farmers one way and then treating Black farmers another way will not be accepted. I applaud Acres of Ancestry for working tirelessly on making sure that everyone understands what our elder farmers are going through.
“These two Sweetgrass Baskets are called ‘Poppa’ and ‘Big Momma.’ It took six months to complete ‘Big Momma’ and four months to complete ‘Poppa.’ They both measure 36 inches tall.”
—Corey Alston, fifth generation basket weaver and cultural preservationist from Mount Pleasant, SC, Artisan Statement
James Baldwin and Chinua Achebe in St. Augustine, Florida, 1980 v
Clifford Prince King
Mary J Blige
Art by Alexis Franklin
RIP.