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Lookbook

Summer Suiting

August 21, 2024, by Celina[zilla_likes]
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Literature

March Reading List

March 27, 2024, by Celina[zilla_likes]
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Lookbook

Snowbody’s Business

February 28, 2024, by Celina[zilla_likes]
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Literature

December Reading Recommendations

December 4, 2023, by Celina[zilla_likes]
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Colored People Time at MIT

February 21, 2020,
by Celina[zilla_likes]

“Colored People Time: Mundane Futures, Quotidian Pasts, Banal Presents,” running at the MIT List Visual Art Center through April 12, explores the history of slavery and colonialism in the United States and the way it continues to impact the lives of black Americans in a modern world.

The show comes to MIT from the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, where Associate Curator Meg Onli put it together. “‘CPT’ builds on my ongoing curatorial investigation of how black Americans use language as a tool to navigate a society marked by inequality and racism,” says Onli. “The title of the exhibition is drawn from the vernacular phrase ‘colored people’s time,’ which is simultaneously perceived as a joke within the black community and as a performance that allows an individual to exist within a temporality created by themselves.”

The show is divided into three sections and three spaces, but the Pasts, Presents and Futures demarcations operate in conversation with each other, connecting historical objects to contemporary discussions and activating each space with the interplay between all three eras. For example, in the Mundane Futures gallery, historic issues of “The Black Panther” newspaper call for free and accessible healthcare and solidarity between oppressed people, issues still very much on today’s political agenda.

These periodicals sit next to Aria Dean’s “Notes on Blacceleration,” which is presented both in its original form as a Skype video lecture and in its later form as a written essay. The lecture explores overlay between the black radical tradition and the idea of accelerationism, which posits that the only way to incite revolt against capitalism is to accelerate and exacerbate its conditions. Nearby on the floor sit copies of the 1899 novel “Imperium in Imperio: A Study of the Negro Race Problem” by Sutton E. Griggs. All of these conversations together illustrate what has changed in the fight against oppression, what hasn’t, and what perhaps should change.

Read my full article in The Bay State Banner.

 

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I'm Celina, a Boston-based art reporter with a penchant for leather jackets, travel adventures, and Russian novels.

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