Saturday 19 September 2015

Black Disabled Art History 101 by Leroy F. Moore Jr

Black Disabled Art History 101 by Leroy F. Moore Jr

Sit down & listen
cause there will be a test at the end
Displaying & speaking
our history & culture
through music & art
From slavery to homeland security
Black disabled artists
roots grow deep
however this garden is starving for recognition
The most famous classical pianist
in the mid to late 19th century
was a Black Blind Autistic slave
Tom Wiggins aka Blind Tom was his slave name
his master used him to make money
and left him poor and broken
Horace Pippin, the first Black Disabled self-taught painter
lost his arm in WW1
using his left arm
to prop up his right forearm
crafted his first masterpiece depicting horrors of war
Oh, the price he paid for being Black, Poor,
Self-taught & Disabled
Blues is the Black Anthem
attract blind singers & musicians
to make a living on the streets
some made it into recording studios
Blind Willie McTell born in 1898
played on the streets of Atlanta
Blind Willie Johnson born around 1902
a street evangelist
stepmother threw lye
in young Johnson’s eyes
causing blindness
Johnson became the first
gospel guitarist too record
he died of pneumonia
hospital refused admittance
due to his blindness
Blind Blake & Blind Boone’s
Birthdates are not known
Blind John William Boone formed
his own concert company
traveling all over the country
more than 8,000 concerts
in the USA Canada, Europe & Mexico
The most popular Male Blues
recording artists of the twenties
was Blind Lemon Jefferson
he was also a street performer
Black deaf schools
in the fifties produced
independent businesses like barber shops
down south and social clubs in the East
Writers like Mary Herring Wright, Linwood
Smith & Ernest Hairston
voice the experiences of our Black Deaf Brothers & Sisters
Listen to the Melody Heartbeat of a Black Deaf Woman
Jades fingers reads I’m a proud Black Deaf Woman
Black sign language was developed ‘cause societal
attitudes & educational policy helped create a dual
system and what grew?
A strong Black Deaf identity
integration killed Black Sign & almost
erased Black Deaf Culture
Let’s travel to Jamaica
Where in the fifties Polio infected the island
Skelly, Wise & Apple are Israel Vibration
they met each other
at Mona Rehabilitation Center
got kicked out ‘cause their religious beliefs in Rasta
homeless, poor & disabled
began to sing on the streets
now they are the Fathers of Reggae
Back to Africa
tribal dancing
to the drumming, guitar strumming and singing
of Amadou & Mariam
a Blind married couple
blending Rock, Pop, Jazz & Hip Hop
with an international flavor
from Cuba to Asia & India to America
Coming home to the Bay Area
to swing from Charles Curtis Blackwell & Avotcha’s
jazz Poe-tree & celebrate
Disabled African American Visual Artists
at Harambee’s annual art show called KUUMBA
So get out your number two pencils for your final
on Black Disabled Art History

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