3 of 6 • 4ft x 6ft acrylic on tapestry fabric. featured in the Embryo VI art exhibtion presented at Blanc' Studio. for PURCHASE INQUIRIES email: [email protected] 🌌
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Brunei
seen from Türkiye

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Portugal
seen from United States
seen from Venezuela

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from United States
3 of 6 • 4ft x 6ft acrylic on tapestry fabric. featured in the Embryo VI art exhibtion presented at Blanc' Studio. for PURCHASE INQUIRIES email: [email protected] 🌌
The second installment in our #myactivism series is now up on the blog. Come meet St.Beauty of Wondaland Records. http://ppw.buzz
embryo VI (2 & 3 of 6) •
MY ACTIVISM: Mychal Denzel Smith
Interview by Myles Johnson | Illustration by Donte Neal
When a cultural cleanse is under way, one of the first things burned to the ground are the libraries. It makes sense. In the library, the Gods, disillusionments, epiphanies, fantasies, and lessons of a people live; if you mean to convince the world that a people never existed, or that they existed insignificantly, destroy the library. When you understand that words hold power, writing can be understood as a form of activism.
You can craft resistance in phrases, and be radicalized in a corner, silently with no one being the wiser. Writing is revolutionary. The key to creating such revolutionary ink is when the writer marries a vicious idea with an understanding of both language and their voice. Writing is magical when that marriage meets a mind that is both willing and open. Writer, Mychal Denzel Smith, is a few-in-a-generation type of writer that articulates problems hidden behind the rib of a generation and uses those discoveries to birth, not just truths, but bridges that make you feel closer in a world that can make you feel wildly isolated. Smith’s latest, Invisible Man, Got the Whole World Watching, sparks conversations that do the deep work of connecting truths about patriarchal and white supremacist domination and, most impressively, demonstrates that he is a great voice without insinuating that he is the great voice; which is a black male patriarchal tradition. Smith is powerful. But, he becomes radical by gracefully sharing that power through transparency about where that power is rooted and where it lives beyond himself.
Mychal Denzel Smith may rarely be seen with a protest sign in the street, but his activism is one that is just as rigorous and his frontlines are in your imagination. For Philadelphia Printworks’ ongoing #MYACTIVISM series, I was permitted to speak with Smith about his fears, his hopes, and his more revolutionary style choices he brings to his creative discipline.
PPW: In your book, you had a very profound observation about the deep contradiction of working at Wal-Mart while using that money to purchase Angela Davis’ autobiography. This battle is universal amongst all people that have a critical consciousness and also desire a way to survive this domination we are critical of. Is there advice you can give to people that might have to navigate domination (in this case, capitalism) but still desire to resist domination?
MDS: This is, perhaps, the biggest internal struggle I face. The ability to survive a capitalist system necessitates a level of compromise with that system, which necessarily puts one in the position of participating in a system of exploitation. But beyond that, there is real pleasure that is found in participation, as capitalist production of goods and services offer for us forms of entertainment and consumer products that appeal directly to our pleasure centers. How, in good conscious, can we allow ourselves that bit of pleasure, of joy, while knowing that it comes at the expense of someone else's exploited labor and/or health? I wish I had better answers here. What I can say is that the changing of individual behavior, while it may bring a personal sense of satisfaction, will not alter the system. We will need collective organizing efforts and macro shift in our economic system to free us from this particular bind.
PPW: From citing bell hooks and Assata Shakur to public dialogues with Janet Mock, you’ve seemed to consistently be inclusive to identities that are beyond cis-gender, heterosexual black men. How conscious is the effort? And how important do you think inclusivity is for people that are looking to create their own resistance work?
MDS: It was deliberate. We are at a point where cisgender, heterosexual-identified black men can no longer act as though we haven't been consistently challenged to de-center our identities, and also interrogate our complicity within patriarchal, homophobic systems. I wouldn't even say it's about "inclusivity," it's about justice. This is our duty, responsibility, and debt to those who we have rendered invisible by virtue of focusing on cisgender, heterosexual black men in our cultural and political work. Failing to live up to that responsibility can no longer be an option.
PPW: You’ve reached a certain amount of visibility that some may never acquire or have yet to acquire. What is one thing you would tell your less visible self about hyper-visibility, or fame, that you’ve learned through experience?
MDS: It's more exhausting than it looks.
PPW: “The struggle continues” is a common phrase. Since domination always exists, it becomes imperative to care for yourself and find delight and humor in life. What are ways you find delight and care for yourself even as the struggle continues?
MDS: Community. The existence of community is vital, for your sanity. To know there are people who see the world similarly and are willing to struggle alongside you is vital to finding joy in this work in order to keep going. Good food, good liquor, good sex. I love watching cartoons, specifically Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, but all the stuff that was hot during my childhood.
PPW: Writing can function as activism and protest. Why did you choose writing as a way to resist and dissent?
MDS: It's where I found my talent lies. That's the important part, understanding what talents you have and how best to turn them toward resistance. Writing was always my thing, even when I didn't take it too seriously. And what our history has shown is that the written word has the ability to shape consciousness not just in its time but for generations. It is lasting, but also flexible. I want to argue, with myself and others, on the page, in hopes that we can imagine and build the new world from what we discover there.
PPW: Politically, a lot has changed (and a lot has stayed the same) since you’ve written your book. What are your thoughts on the current political climate?
MDS: I'm scared. I'm still working through my thoughts, but what I feel is scared.
PPW: Specifically talking to other writers that admire you and use you as a possibility model, what is advice you can give them on their journey?
MDS: The only advice to give to a writer (in my mind) is to keep writing. Keep struggling with the blank page, keep challenging yourself to do new, scary, exciting, innovative things. Keep pitching and being rejected. Keep searching for your voice. You are needed, no matter what messages you receive from the rest of the world. We have to keep pushing forward and the way we've chosen to do that, as writers, is to write. So keep writing.
PPW: Many feel hopeless and often many look toward the writer to reinvigorate the imagination. Can you give language towards what gives you hope?
MDS: I know it's hard to see, especially at a time like right now, but things do change for the better. The systems of oppression change, as well, and become more entrenched, as they learn our methods of resistance, or in response to our victories. But we do, sometimes, win. And that fact, that our victories, big and small, have so dramatically altered the course of human history tells me that we possess the will to persist, and that persistence will yield results. We may not see them in our lifetimes, but they can and will come.
PPW: There are accepted definitions of a word or a thing, and definitions that we personally conjure up; what is your definition of activism?
MDS: Activism is the work that recognizes the damage of the status quo and consciously attempts to undo it.
PPW: What is something an elder has said to you that has proven to be true?
MDS: I just turned 30, and I'm remembering all the times an elder has told me that I wasn't going to be young forever. That's not saying 30 is old, but what I'm realizing now is that they were telling me my identity couldn't depend on being young forever. You have to figure out who you are outside of your youth, because not only is it not going to last forever, but you're going to get to a point where you wouldn't want it to.
PPW: This can be as fun/silly or as serious as you desire for it to be! What have you done today to resist the powers that be?
MDS: Rocked one of my Philadelphia Printworks sweatshirts.
https://www.philadelphiaprintworks.com/blogs/news/my-activism-mychal-denzel-smith
Good morning, I have started writing a series on African Feminists, through through The African Feminist forum, www.africanfeministforum.com Today I celebrate our sisters from Ghana: Theo Sowa, Nana Darkoa Sekyiamah and Maame Afon Yelbert-Obeng, For more information go to my blog: Rosiemoteneblog.wordpress.com #writingthroughmyworld #myactivism #aff #africanfeministforum
Interview by Jessica Rodriguez | Illustration by Donte Neal
Editor’s Note: The idea that there is scarcity in the world is a capitalist lie. That lie would have us believe that if we give something, we lose something and that we must employ greed to not only make ourselves comfortable but to ensure our safety. This lie can be understood as a major reason why gluttony is a problem in one part of the world and starvation is a problem in another. The truth is that when you give and share, your world expands. When you give and share your family becomes a community, and your community becomes a nation. This truth is not particularly convenient for those that profit from greed, but it still remains.
This truth is why collaboration can be located as a form of resistance work. Collaboration, if it is to be done correctly, calls for two or more parties’ rejection of ideas that are informed by greed to create a thing that transcends what those parties could do independently. It is beautiful to be a part of and it is beautiful to witness. Philadelphia Printworks, for our #MYACTIVISM series, spoke with the patron saints of that particular mode of beauty, known as the musical duo St. Beauty. St. Beauty is the Wondaland-signed, Janelle Monae-approved soul band that defies labels with their sounds effortlessly going from hip-hop to trip-hop to acoustic rock to funk to electronic, and back again. Through their music and performance, they exhibit a type of activism that is vital to witness; the activism that is musical creation and collaboration. This is a transcript of the conversation that St. Beauty (comprised of Alex and Isis) had with our zine editor, Jessica Rodriguez, where they laugh and share thoughts on stardom, collaboration, and paradise.
I think to produce anything great you must collaborate. That seems even truer for you two since you are a duo. How do you think collaboration allows you to create your good work in ways being a solo artist may not?
Alex: Getting Ideas from other people [and] being inspired by other people’s ideas because you may think your ideas are great but there’s always somebody with a different perspective. Seeing other people's perspective is really inspiring.
You are a part of this bigger collective in Wondaland Records with amazing artists and ideas always floating around, so despite it being cliché, I’m very interested in what is inspiring you, right now?
Isis: Right now I’m really inspired by people I’m around, my friends and seeing how talented they are and basking in that and being aware of that. I’m inspired by Solange and the new year coming up [laughs]
Alex: There has been one thing that has been really inspiring me, this vision of seeing all of my family in paradise. I want to make that happen one day, I don’t know how it’s going to happen but that’s something that I really want to see one day, you know being surrounded by all of my friends and family in one place, in a paradise and everybody happy and smiling. I see it happening, it’s in my heart, it’s inside of me and that’s something that keeps me going, it really inspires me to keep going, keep working and keep creating. It’s the one thing that I think about every day.
That is so beautiful when you say paradise, do you have a specific place in mind?
Alex: Yea, last year Janelle flew a bunch of us out to a villa in Mexico and it was amazing, just being there with all these awesome people and it was really inspirational and I want to do that same thing for my family that Janelle did for us.
That’s so cool! I’m actually half Mexican, my mom is from Oaxaca! What part of Mexico?
Alex: Oh dope! It was right outside of Puerto Vallarta.
Puerto Vallarta is beautiful! Like you mentioned earlier, Isis, this year has been pretty crazy and tumultuous. What was the most challenging thing you’ve had to overcome and how did you do it?
Isis: People [not believing] in us and having to continuously prove [ourselves] by being great and making sure we communicate and lift each other up.
Alex: Being discouraged is hard, being in the music industry isn’t easy. We have to stay encouraged every day and that’s something that can be difficult [to do] when you’re working hard and things don’t turn out the way you want them to. But [we] just keep going.
Yea most, definitely. I recently watched your video for Going Nowhere and you had a Bay Window Volkswagen and I literally died [laughs] it was so beautiful! I myself have a ‘84 Westfalia Volkswagen that I did a cross country road trip in last year. It really made me happy to see that in your video, because as weird as it is, I feel like for people of color, especially women of color doing road trips [or exploring the outdoors] isn’t commonly depicted. I just wanted to say that. [laughs]
Isis: That’s dope that you did that!
Thanks! It was really amazing. So speaking of traveling on the road, rituals and routines are important to all artists, but I’d imagine for artists that travel a lot, it’s just as important but harder to come by. What are your daily rituals and mantras that help you remain grounded?
Isis: A prayer every morning. Making sure you declare how you want your day to go. I definitely have to work out!
Alex: Praying, of course, and doing something that makes me feel good about myself every day. Like pampering, I just started steaming my face with rose water and it’s really soothing. I like reading Don Miguel Ruiz books too, they’re so inspiring! He wrote The Four Agreements, The Book of Knowledge, The Mastery of Self, I just love his books! That’s it for now, it may change.
Yea definitely, like with anything in life, routines and rituals change over time. I love taking baths and pampering myself because it’s an act of self-care and having me time is really grounding and therapeutic. I think it goes along perfectly with your team’s mission to heal and inspire. What do you envision people healing from and what do you envision yourselves inspiring people to do?
Alex: You know when other people see that someone is going through something similar to what they’re going through, it’s really healing and it really helps them realize that they’re not in it alone. People tend to think that no one is going through their same [struggles] so we love writing songs about things that we go through because everybody goes through similar [struggles]...doing that through music is really important and I really feel could heal people.
Isis: Alex said it perfectly. Writing the songs have also been healing for us. It’s kind of a two-way street we’re healing and inspiring ourselves and doing it for other people also. Personally, we haven’t seen anyone like us and it just shows that you can look like us and go through what we go through but still push through and don’t have to worry about what your hair or skin looks like. It’s like saying “hey, look at us, we’re just like you!”
For sure! Like I said, watching your video was so inspiring I was like “Yes! Other women of color are into this.” [laughs] It’s a really cool feeling. And even how Alex mentioned, Solange's album A Seat At the Table touched a lot of people of color, especially millennials. It was for us. And with 2016 being a crazy year, current music has really evolved into a specific theme of healing. It’s really cool that you guys are also focusing that into your music.
So how did you become a part of Wondaland?
Alex: We started performing at this place that we both worked at, a boutique called Poor Little Rich Girl and I really wanted to perform so I asked Isis if she knew anybody who could play guitar and then she offered and we practiced together and performed together for the first time and it went amazingly and we just kept performing every month at the showcases in the basement. We just kept going and Isis knew some people that were already in Wondaland that showed up and eventually, Janelle came and was inspired by what we were doing and we just built that relationship and here we are.
That’s awesome! It just all happened organically. That’s how you know when things are just meant to be. St. Beauty represents a possibility for women to exist in entertainment in unconventional ways. Like you mentioned Isis, you guys have a different “look” and your music is all about showing people that you can look a certain way, or not, and still do what you love. So what advice can you give women looking to exist unconventionally on their journey?
Alex: Remembering who you are and that your journey is your journey and not anyone else’s. Knowing that you’re the shit [laughs].
So you feel you built up your confidence along this journey or do you think you always started out with a good sense of self and high level of confidence?
Alex: I definitely didn’t. I did not have a lot of confidence. I feel like right now, I’m [the most] confident that I’ve ever been just based off of experiences. I feel great right now and pumped, and prepared.
What advice would you give Isis?
Isis: Really knowing yourself and like Alex said, try not to compare yourself to anybody. It’s just going to be really difficult for you to try to be someone else. Really look at yourself and know what your strengths are, what your weaknesses are and even if you need to find someone to hold those weaknesses for you and be that strong part of yourself [then do it]. It’s what I think makes St. beauty work. Just be yourself, it’s truly as simple as that (not simple, but it is simple).
Do you guys feel like throughout your journey you’ve had a solid support system and people that have been there for you?
Alex: Yea definitely and it’s growing every day. It’s been awesome and really inspiring seeing fans really ride or die and support our journey. You know, it has taken us a while to release a project but people are still very supportive. Every time we release a song, people are so excited about our project, no matter how long it’s been. It makes us feel really great that people that don’t even know us personally backing us up.
Isis: And just like you guys wanting to interview us, it’s just like “wow, you wanna interview lil’ ol us at home while we’re chillin” [laughs].
There are accepted definitions of a word or a thing, and definitions that we conjure up; what is your definition of activism?
Alex: My definition of activism, is really taking action in what you believe in and really wanting to make a change in the world. And knowing in your heart that you can do it.
What is something an elder has said to you that you’ve discovered to be true?
Isis: My dad recently told me, “care for people, but also make sure you care for yourself” and that’s been really true in my relationships in life. You can get so lost in helping other people, which isn’t a bad thing but it’s also kind of like being godly you know, god is love; you have to give love but you also have to [receive it] and you have to love yourself. It’s all intertwined and it rings true, especially right now.
Alex: It wasn’t really an elderly person, it was my mom and she’s not really elderly yet [laughs] but pretty much similar to what Isis said about not being able to find anybody who really loves you unless you love yourself. I’ve realized that time and time again. Every time I go through a discouraging phase or feeling like I’m not good enough or inadequate, I always feel like people around me feel the same way about me. And I’ve come to a place where I am happy with who I am and I feel better about who I am and I can see the change in people around me based on how I feel about myself.
Isis: What people have to realize about older people is that they’re still human beings, they’re still growing and learning. You never stop learning. Think about how old you are and how old your parents were when they had you, they had to be parents at that age. They definitely made mistakes but you have to forgive them for that because you never know what state they were in, they didn’t learn certain things or their parents probably didn’t teach them. I just want to let the youth know that it’s important to understand that we’re all still learning.
Totally. It’s all a growing process, it’s all a journey and everyone is on their own individual paths.
Isis: Exactly.
So this brings us to our last question and this can be as fun/silly or as dead serious as you desire for it to be! What have you done today to resist the powers that be?
Isis: I’m just kinda lame today...I prayed. I just feel like this whole interview we’ve been like super deep [laughs].
That’s not lame! This question is meant to be as serious or silly as you want. So when we say the powers that be, I guess what we mean by that is the heaviness in the air from all that’s been going on; how do we resist that negativity? For example, the people that try to bring you down, or don’t believe in you, basically anything that is conflicting with your light or your power. How do you resist that?
Alex: Well I walked out the house without makeup on and I did not care! [laughs].
https://www.philadelphiaprintworks.com/blogs/news/my-activism-st-beauty
@myactivism replied to your post “UGH so I’m back in the apartment and I really really hate it. I always...”
Oh i see. I though you already had it. I know July cant get here fast enough.
Yeah no I’m still in this horrible apartment and it’s making me sick. It’s horribly empty and lonely in here now. I will feel a lot better when I get into my nice new apartment. Are you moving in July too??
@myactivism replied to your post “my family visit is almost done, i leave today at 2:50 pm. i have...”
I thought you were happy about your new place? Let's make sure to talk this weekend. Love you.
That would be really great, let’s make it happen. I am happy about my new place and I’m REALLy looking forward to moving in on July 10th but in the meantime I’m living in the apartment where the relationship died. And I have to pack it all up too, which won’t be easy with my fibro. I mean, getting the boxes to my place is difficult enough. At least my mom, dad, & step mom are coming to help & I’m hiring movers. I don’t know how I’ll afford it but I have no choice. Speaking of, I need to call to book them today so I know that’s set up. Ughhhhh so much.
Not only all that, but I lost my phone on the train on the trip down to see family and while I have insurance (THANK GOD!!!!!!!!!!!!!! always do the phone insurance folks!!!) the replacement phone is a lemon. It sounds like the person you’re talking to is coming out of a tin can and the data doesn’t work no matter how nicely you ask it. And the employee from my service provider who was supposed to help me troubleshoot the problem was a complete tool about the whole process. He didn’t even wanna trouble shoot. He just wanted me to call insurance and send it back. And he didn’t even give me his employee # so I could actually get the insurance claim processed!!!! The insurance provider was shocked by this and told me he was supposed to troubleshoot FIRST and I should absolutely not have had to twist his arms and pull teeth to get him to do anything at all to help me. I was just appalled and I will be mounting a complaint this with the company because that was unacceptable. I also suggested my insurance people complain as well since it’s their money he’s fucking with. UGH I am so pissed about that shit. And all this happened just before my little sister’s graduation. I had to get rude and loud on the phone to make this shit happen and i was not at all impressed. I’m getting another replacement in the mail in a day or two so hopefully this one won’t be a piece of crap. *cries*