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February: One more day celebrating Blackness, Black History in Providence

Poetry, musical performances, lectures for February events

Luckily for readers, the RISD Museum exhibition “I Will Not Bend An Inch” will be on display until Summer 2024. Unveiled on Feb. 17, the exhibition centers on the work of Nancy Elizabeth Prophet and features several wood-and-marble-made sculptures. 
Courtesy of the RISD Museum
Luckily for readers, the RISD Museum exhibition 鈥淚 Will Not Bend An Inch鈥 will be on display until Summer 2024. Unveiled on Feb. 17, the exhibition centers on the work of Nancy Elizabeth Prophet and features several wood-and-marble-made sculptures. Courtesy of the RISD Museum

February was one day longer this year and filled with a myriad of events celebrating Blackness and Black History, ranging from artistic performances to lectures on the 14th Amendment. Look back on a month of celebration to learn more about the organizations, people and events uplifting Blackness year-round. 

EX LIBRIS: Gregory Pardlo and Tina Cane 

On Feb. 2, Gregory Pardlo, Tina Cane and community members came together to the release of Pardlo鈥檚 new poetry collection, 鈥淪pectral Evidence.鈥 Pardlo read from the collection alongside Cane, who read from her most recent collection 鈥淵ear of the Murder Hornet.鈥 The also included a conversation between the poets.

Pardlo has won a Pulitzer Prize for his poetry, which touches on topics of race and class, American life, masculinity and identity. In Pardlo鈥檚 website, his book 鈥淭otem,鈥 is as poetry imbued with 鈥渟tories of factory hours and picket lines from his father,鈥 and sounds from 鈥渢he bars, clubs, and on the radio.鈥

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鈥淪pectral Evidence鈥 is Pardlo鈥檚 third poetry collection, featuring topics of devotion, art and the force of law. The collection also includes considerations of 鈥減ro-wrestler Owen Hart; Tituba, the only Black woman to be accused of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials; MOVE, the movement and militant separatist group famous for its violent stand-offs with the Philadelphia Police Department,鈥 according to the . 

Tina Cane, a recent poet laureate of Rhode Island, is the Founder/Director of Writers-in-the-Schools, RI. Her collection 鈥渘avigate(s) the uneasy terrain of the self amid an increasingly tumultuous and fragmented world,鈥 according to a .

Langston Hughes Community Poetry Reading 

鈥 an organization which hopes to share and build on Langston Hughes鈥檚 legacy 鈥 hosted several events during February.

The organization鈥檚 signature event 鈥 the annual Langston Hughes Community Poetry Reading 鈥 hosted its 29th reading on Feb. 4. The reading brings together artists and community members to share and celebrate the Harlem Renaissance poet Langston Hughes. 

This year鈥檚 reading centered on the theme of Hughes as a global poet. According to the organization鈥檚 , Hughes鈥 鈥渏ourneys further prove that his life and work can unite people of different races, backgrounds, professions and ages.鈥 In this spirit, students from performed readings at the event. 

The event has previously been described as a 鈥渓abor of love鈥 by April Brown, co-director of the Poetry Reading, The Herald previously reported. Others have emphasized the healing and community-building aspects of the event. 

On Feb. 24, the Poetry Reading hosted an additional discussion on Black Women and Dance Studio Ownership in New England. Brown moderated the discussion with dance studio owners Dee Dee Handy Morris and Claude Michelle Oliveira.

Brown鈥檚 2024 Martin Luther King Jr. Lecture: Sherrilyn Ifill

Sherrilyn Ifill, the former president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, delivered the University鈥檚 2024 Martin Luther King Jr. Lecture on Feb. 15, The Herald previously reported. Ifill鈥檚 speech placed an emphasis on the history and legacy of the 14th Amendment. She has also founded the 14th Amendment Center at Howard University. 

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Ifill stressed the importance of civic participation and 鈥渋mplored the audience to meaningfully research and engage with politics at all levels of government.鈥 Speaking on the US鈥檚 political polarization and the country's political future, she stated that 鈥渨e have to be willing to take hold of power.鈥 Her speech also referenced themes of love and justice. 

The lecture additionally included a performance by , an a cappella group at the University.

EXULTATION: An evening of uplift with the Mixed Magic Exult Choir

On Feb. 27 the Mixed Magic Exult Choir performed at the Providence Performing Arts Center, putting on a 鈥渕usical program that range(d) in style from soul to jazz, from pop to gospel, from Bob Marley and Prince to Bob Dylan,鈥 according to the . 

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The Exult Choir, formed by the Mixed Magic Theatre, aims 鈥渢o preserve traditional gospel music and to explore and demonstrate its impact on music, human rights movements and cultures throughout the world,鈥 the Theatre鈥檚 . Their performance at the Providence Performing Arts Center was one of their major annual concerts.

In addition to its resident choir, The Mixed Magic Theatre serves as a venue for plays, dance and music concerts, also hosting a monthly performance series titled (RI)SE TO BLACK, which 鈥渟howcases the talents of both emerging and established BIPOC talent in Rhode Island,鈥 according to . 

鈥淔irst think diverse鈥 鈥 the creed of the Theatre 鈥 places a large emphasis on its place within the community, the website states. Its mission statement is 鈥渢o build more literate and arts-active communities by presenting a diversity of ideas and images on stage, and use the theater and its related arts forms to tell great stories from America and around the world.鈥

Nancy Elizabeth Prophet: 鈥業 Will Not Bend An Inch鈥

Luckily for readers, the RISD Museum exhibition will be on display until Summer 2024. Unveiled on Feb. 17, the exhibition centers on the work of Nancy Elizabeth Prophet and features several wood-and-marble-made sculptures, as well as 鈥渨ood friezes, watercolors and photographic presentations of archival documents and lost or destroyed sculptures,鈥 according to the museum鈥檚  

Black and Narragansett, Prophet was one of the first known women of color to graduate from the Rhode Island School of Design. She later went on to co-found the arts program at Spelman College. 

The exhibit places an emphasis on systemic racism in the art world and includes 鈥渆xcerpts from Prophet鈥檚 diary from Paris and the artist鈥檚 correspondence with African American historian and civil-rights advocate W. E. B. Du Bois,鈥 according to the press release. The museum believes that these records provide 鈥渋nsight into how (Prophet) navigated the art world and sought to position her work.鈥

The exhibition is the 鈥渕ost comprehensive presentation and analysis of Prophet's work to date,鈥 according to the press release.


Mikayla Kennedy

Mikayla Kennedy is a Metro editor covering Housing and Transportation. She is a sophomore from New York City studying Political Science and Public Policy Economics.



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