Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Call to Diaspora Artists--A Contest!

$ 2000L 1st PRIZE
Sunrise Mansion Art Gallery & Museum, Isla del Sol (176,223, 22) is now accepting submissions from SL artists for its April Show!! Le Chapeau, The Hat, The Crown, The Bonnet, All mediums and all levels of experience welcome--paintings, photography, sculpties, etc.--to present fashion photos of the best and most stylish hats and head wraps of the African Diaspora. In addition to the awarding of Lindens, the opening of the exhibit is going to be celebrated with a southern-style HIGH-TEA!!! Interested participants should contact Indea Vaher or Aletha Inaka directly to submit their entries, before the deadline of March 27th, 2009. Good luck!

Monday, March 23, 2009

Glowing Skins for Ethnic Girls and Boys

I spent over an hour happily and enthusiastically collecting demos of skins and hair and shapes to sample in Shiloh Jun's store Shybooty, and it's a wonderful place for women of color who are not at all shy about having generous booties! Now I am back at home trying on my new stuff, and I'm definitely seeing faces and bodies that remind me of my momma, my aunts, my sister and my girlfriends. Distinctive facial features were complimented by vibrant, glowing and flattering selections of makeup looks, and subtle details to the shading and freckling of skins overall gave them a realistic depth that pops on the screen. I found the shapes a bit too top-heavy for my personal tastes, but if your lover likes his or her hands full, well, you might like Shiloh's shapes too, and she also has a line of BBW shapes and kids' shapes available too so that a genuine family can be represented. Among all of the interesting offerings in the store is also a line inspired by the looks of Miss Universe contestants representing a true United Nations of feminine beauty, including Misses Brazil, Dominican Republic, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Russia, South Africa, Sweden, Trinidad, and Miss United States. They look so lovely, I hope more are on the way so that we can really play, maybe have our own SL pageant! I haven't even tried on any of the hair, tattoos or clothing I bought, let alone any of the men's shapes and skins, so when I do, I'll try to remember to report back! Even though I love my own shape and skin, the one I've been in since I first came here nearly two years ago, I plan to be playing with these new, fun, very authentically black pieces for a long while. If you want to look like a sista should, I encourage you to explore Shybooty too.http://slurl.com/secondlife/Marqi%20Global%20HQ/89/217/24/

Black Entrepreneurs Historical Exhibit

We have a brand new exhibit at the Federal Reserve Underground, a rented space on Jokaydia SLurl http://slurl.com/secondlife/jokaydia/161/245/22, and organizer Oothoon Ogg would love to get feedback from others interested in education and black history in SL. She is in the process of designing a program for the exhibit and would like to get a sense from other people how easy it is to grasp the content, how interesting is it, what is missing, and any general comments. My friend Jaque Quijote did this lovely build, and it is a smaller version of an exhibit in RL that has just opened at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and will soon open in a second location at the Museum of African American History in Boston. his exhibition focuses on enterprising black entrepreneurs of the 18th and 19th centuries in New England.

Since the Colonial era African Americans have contributed to the economic development of this country. They have engaged in small-scale and large-scale commercial enterprises -- ranging from home-based businesses and small shops to regional, national, and international companies. Like their mainstream counterparts, African Americans have developed products, selected markets, created economic networks, invested strategically, and sought to balance risks and rewards, costs and profits.
In America blacks built on African economic traditions in the context of the New World economy. Many had participated as producers, brokers, traders, and merchants in the complex market economies of West and Central Africa before their involuntary arrival on American shores. Blacks seized opportunities to create enterprises and to participate in the commercial life of a developing nation. Despite challenges posed by slavery and racism, African Americans' entrepreneurial activity has been sustained in America for almost five centuries, from the agrarian economy of the seventeenth century to the contemporary post-industrial economy.

This exhibit introduces visitors to such significant figures as Harriet Jacobs, who was one of the first published African American authors in the United States (her semi-biographical novel is listed on a brief list of suggestions for further reading and sources that the creator of the exhibit used), and Paul Cuffe, a philanthropist and investor who began as a sailor and merchant. The exhibit is visually rich and distinctive, as well as informative and inspiring in these difficult economic times. It is a powerful reminder of the long history that African Americans have of uniting their pursuit of freedom with the pursuit of financial security, not simply for the betterment of the individual, but for the betterment of the black community, and of the country as a whole.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Club Zion

Jamaica's ladies were out in force on a Saturday night when I dropped into Zion on the Excellens sim to see what was happening. With DJ Flight on the turntables, the dance floor was hot, and the dance hall girls were smokin', and somehow it didn't matter that it was mostly a girls' night out! (Where, oh where, are all the men tonight?) On Friday nights, from 7 to 9 SLT, the club presents a mix of lovers' rock, dancehall, roots and reggae with DJ Lion4zion, and on Tuesdays, DJ Jah-Jah focuses on a lovers' groove, also from 7 to 9 SLT. Come out and enjoy the 360 degrees of good vibrations, and share them with your friends. Owner jaja windlow invites visitors to join the VIP group to get regular updates to the calendar of events; this is definitely a place worth landmarking. http://slurl.com/secondlife/Excellens/86/76/34/