Found from various places online:
The Pedagogy of the Oppressed by Paulo Freire
Angela Y. Davis - Are Prisons Obsolete?
Angela Y. Davis - Race, Women, and Class
The Communist Manifesto - Marx and Engels
Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches by Audre Lorde (link updated 1/14)
Jacob Lawrence's tempera paintings produced in 1941 — just 10 years after his family uprooted to Harlem — have been reunited at the Museum of Modern Art for the first time in 20 years.
Füsun and Faruk Eczacibaşi discuss their collection from their home in Istanbul’s Galatasaray neighborhood.
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DeUE4kHRpEk)
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhECDSuXRDs)
(via Jason deCaires Taylor on His Ambitious New Underwater Sculpture Museum)
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=halGxTJEUaM)
"Bashed Out" is the title track from This Is The Kit's forthcoming album produced by The National's Aaron Dessner, due for release April 6 (UK/Europe) and April 7 (North America). This Is The Kit is the much beloved musical project of Kate Stables, born in England and based in Paris, though the heart of their musical community remains in Bristol, UK. Bashed Out is her band’s third album, the result of an extended period collaboration with the record’s producer Aaron Dessner (Sharon Van Etten, Local Natives). Dessner--the co-founder of the Brassland label--is best known for his work in The National and, indeed, the backing band he gathered for Bashed Out combines the talents of This Is The Kit’s touring members (Rozi Plain, Jesse Vernon, Jamie Whitby-Coles), alongside a number of session players drawn from the Brooklyn music scene: Bryce Dessner, Thomas Bartlett (Doveman, The Gloaming), Matt Barrick (The Walkmen) and Ben Lanz (Beirut, The National) all made key instrumental contributions. As notable as the band, however, is front woman Kate Stables, whose voice hearkens back to the classic singer-songwriter era--her distinctive, cutting vocals up front in the mix. It’s a self-confidence gained since her previous album, 2011’s Wriggle Out the Restless, which made her band a minor institution in the United Kingdom, especially on the radio which has embraced the group. This Is The Kit has received across the board support from BBC 6 DJs Lauren Laverne, Radcliffe & Maconie, Marc Riley, Cerys Matthews, and Mary Anne Hobbs--receiving further play from BBC Radio 1’s Huw Stephens, Jen & Ally, and Phil Taggart. "Wonderful wonderful stuff," said DJ and Elbow frontman Guy Garvey, before arguing their last album should have made the Mercury Prize shortlist. On Bashed Out, the band continue their musical evolution into a synesthetic, shape-shifting entity—rooted in folk but encompassing elements of psychedelia, alternative rock, and electronic textures and sensibilities. The Line of Best Fit has called Kate's and TITK and "essential fixture of British folk music for the past 10 years…one of a handful of truly innovate songwriters working with the British folk template today."
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M9MayBUgSHI)
Shots from David Levine’s various reenactments of classic Central Park movie scenes such as Bullets Over Broadway (1994), Symbiopsychotaxiplasm (1968), The Out of Towners (1970), Cruel Intentions (1999), and Portrait of Jennie (1948) as part of Drifting in Daylight: Art in Central Park