Interior Design Archive

  • Rivington_Adayje.002

    Rivington Gallery: A Must See in London

    by Michele Washington

    Need of a diverse cultural surge in London? Rivington Place is a must see. Located in the Shoreditch section of East London, this exhilarating cultural center is one of the first newly built gallery artist spaces in London since the Hayward Gallery in 1968. It is a public two-story space housing two cultural organizations, Autograph ABP and INVIA (Institute of International Visual Arts). Autograph ABP curates photography exhibits with a focus on cultural identity and human rights while INVIA, provides much needed diverse global educational programs, and research in the visual arts.

    Rivington Place is booming with a multitude of dynamic programming from film screenings, lectures, plus the Stuart Hall Library, named after Jamaica born intellect and one of Britain’s leading cultural theorist of the 20th century. The library is a repository of unique holding of cultural and visual materials from British artist of diverse backgrounds to contemporary art from Africa, Asia, and Latin America, along with its expansive collection of monographs, exhibitions catalogs, and various art periodicals. It includes work by such prominent visual artist as filmmaker Isaac Julien, Hew Locke and Chris Ofili whose collaged Madonna piece imbued with dung created a hoopla at the Brooklyn Museum in 1999.

    Just as fascinating is the building’s sculptural form designed by Tanzanian born international architect, David Adajye in 2007, with offices in London, Berlin and New York City. Situated on the corner of Rivington Street and Rivington Place, the stoned structure seems much taller than its two stories. Adajye’s exterior facade was inspired by Sowei mask from Sierra Leone; the exterior structure is configured in symmetrical a lattice pattern of gray stone and glass allowing natural light to flow into the interior space. The Facades earthy gray tones are reflected in the lobby, and swanky cafe located in the back on the first floor that offers visitors tasty snacks.

    On view in the galleries through 27 November, 2010 at Rivington Place are two magnificent photography exhibits” Ever Young: James Barnor and The Paris Albums 1900 W.E.B Du Bois both curated by Autograph ABP.  James Barnor, a prominent Ghanaian photographer began his career in Jamestown, Accra in 1949. In the 1950s, Barnor operated Ever Young studio in Accra, and photographed for the top African lifestyle DRUM magazine.

    James Barnor’s showing of a series of lively over-scaled black and white or color photographs depicts everyday life of men; women and children, marks him as a highly skilled portraiture photographer. Barnor knows how to capture the essence of his subjects by placing them in a variety of staged studio settings or campy street scenes. His images span the spectrum from hyper-stylized street fashion photography of a woman in a mini dress standing in sea of pigeons in Trafalgar Square in London. To a hilarious parody by a group of African comedians switching up vaudevilles derogatory blackface to mocking whiteface.

    Untitled #8, 1972 captures a woman sporting an Afro hairstyle, as a perfect example of transferences borrowing from the 1960s Black Arts Movement in the United States. In another photograph a striking pose of preteen-girl leaning on an upright white wooden pedestal, creates a compelling visual narrative by the contrasting placement of a tattered ceramic mascot of a young white girl, originally designed for the family run umbrella shop James and Sons. Does this image imply the black girls achievement of power?

    Barnor’s body of work offer the viewer a unique chance to visually experience the transatlantic transferences of everyday life through portraitures of Ghanaians after they migrated to London during the 1960s and 1970s.

    The Paris Albums 1900: WEB DuBois featuring a unique historical collection of photography was previously shown at the 1900 Paris Exposition. DuBois showed his entire 363 photographs in the American Negro Exhibit section; this has only 200 photos of Negroe types from Georgia and they represent a visual construction of the New African American identity. They show an insight into the conditions of black culture at the end of the 19th century, just 35 years after the abolition of slavery.

    None of the sitters are identified. Simply posed, the sitters are stylishly dressed, the women in high collared laced Victorian dresses, and the men in dapper suits with crisp white buttoned collared shirts and thin bow ties. Look for the sitters’ Eurocentric facial traits with characteristically thinner noses and lips, and wavy or naturally straight hair texture; and the sequential arrangement of the photos mimicking the repetitive flow of filmstrip projected on a wall. While the images are impressive, it is the quotations aligning the outer walls above the photos that provide a context of the cultural significance of the Negroes lifestyle and DuBois’ political theory.

    Both shows run until 27 November 2010 at Rivington Place, located at Rivington Pace, in London.

    Rivington Place, London EC2A 3BA, Tel: +44 (0)20 7749 1240, info@rivingtonplace.org, web: http://www.rivingtonplace.org/

    Autograph ABP: +44 (0)20 7729 9200, www.autograph-abp.co.ukinfo@autograph-abp.co.uk

    Iniva: +44 (0)20 7729 9616; www.iniva.orginiva@iniva.org

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  • horses

    Inside African Design World by Nii Commey Botchway: November 3, 2010

    by Nii Commey Botchway

    Each day, I send out a series of vital bits of information to my contacts and one day Atim Annette Oton suggested we chronicle my list of insights and websites I find into a series for Black Design News Network. Inside African Design World is BDNN’s way of collecting my insights. This is the journey where I will post 5-10 items every two weeks. Collect, Share and Re-distribute. It’s Africa’s Design time.

    1. Good Resource FYI: http://www.africandigitalart.com/

    2. Interesting Article: http://www.fastcompany.com/1596460/kenyas-first-viral-music-video-an-autotuned-blaxploitation-epic

    3. African youth and the African brand- interesting: http://annansi.com/blog/2010/04/african-youth-and-the-african-brand-presentation/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+annansi%2FFgtA+%28Annansi+Chronicles%29

    4. New modes in design education: http://johnnyholland.org/2010/04/12/the-strange-connection-between-entitlement-social-innovation-and-interaction-design/

    5. This is why I teach. Portfolio of one of my ex-students who graduated just in Feb. Enjoy: http://somethingclairva.blogspot.com/

    _______________

    Nii Commey (Nii K) Botchway - Trained at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (formally the Port Elizabeth Technikon), in South Africa, Nii is a graphic designer and educator. After serving as an art director in the advertising industry for several years, he shifted his focus towards academia. Nii’s most recent posts were at Vega the Brand Communication School Johannesburg, heading up the 2nd year B.A. programme, and a part-time lectureship at NEMISA (National Electronic Media Institute of South Africa). As a participant in the ICSID Interdesign Citymove Gellivare Sweden, he worked in an internationl, multidisciplinary team of designers to develop sustainable solutions for relocating a city adversely affected by mining. This was a rewarding experience that significantly influenced his approach to design education. Nii relocated to Accra in early 2010 and worked for Ogilvy. He just returned to South Africa. Be sure to check out Ab-Strackt, Nii’s online T-Shirt company.

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  • neocon-logo_2010_annouce

    Sustainable Design Shoots in the Diaspora at NEOCON Baltimore, 2010

    Date: Thursday, October 28 Time: 1-2:30 p.m.

    Black Design News Network (BDNN) presents a panel discussion showcasing what some black designers are working on in the diaspora – Africa, Caribbean and the US – from the development of sustainable products, to projects and interventions. It will look at the processes, challenges and issues of developing ecological products in communities of color and in the developing world.

    This session is sponsored by The Black Design News Network, (BDNN) is the premier black design content website and voice of black designers world-wide features four key service components: a news bureau, online publication, digital library and ‘workspace’ hub for designers. It is also sponsored by FocusOnDesign and Designers421

    Speakers:

    • Florine Demonsthene – product designer Chale, Ghana
    • Trudy Miller, Trudy Miller Layers, Eco fashion
    • Aurora Robinson – architectural designer, Green Design Links
    • Atim Annette Oton, ZimaZee Crafts, Nigeria and Co-Founder Black Design News Network, moderator


    Credits: .15 CEU
    Fee: $15; Free to Students
    Level: Intermediate

    Location: The Baltimore Convention Center, 1 W Pratt St Baltimore, Maryland 21201

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  • BDNN Reading List: Our Selected List for Fall 2010

    BDNN Reading List: Our Selected List for Fall 2010

    Every quarter, Black Design News Network (BDNN) will release a select list of books to read:

    1. Design in a Global Context: Envisioning Postcolonial and Transnational Possibilities by Karen Fiss; http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/desi.2009.25.3.3

    2.  The Inmates Are Running the Asylum – Why High Tech Products Drive Us Crazy and How To Restore The Sanity
    by Alan Cooper, Paul Saffo

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  • Haiti--event

    After Catastrophe, Before Design: Rebuilding Haiti after the Earthquake.

    6:30 Monday October 18th

    at Avery Hall

    Please join the Latin Lab Debate at Columbia University

    Speakers:  Dowoti Desir; Charles Marks, architect; Marc Andre Franche, UNDP Haiti; and Jesse M. Keenan, University of Miami will be speaking at a forum moderated by Clara Irazabal for what should be a robust discussion.

    Details:

    http://www.arch.columbia.edu/event/news-events/events/lecture-series/latin-lab-debate-after-catastrophe-design-rebuilding-haiti-a

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  • bddn-newsletter-top-nav1

    BDNN presents Marketing and Branding for Fashion Designers

    Black Design News Network (BDNN) presents Marketing and Branding for Fashion Designers at Brooklyn Fashion Week BKstyle!™

    Date: Sunday October 24

    Time: 11am – 1pm

    Where: Studio 964, 964 Dean Street, Brooklyn, NY (between Franklin and Classon Avenue)

    Cost: $30 for 2 hour seminar,  Please pay here http://bkfwworkshops.eventbrite.com/

    The goal of this workshop is to provide and suggest out-of the-box marketing, communication and branding ideas to Brooklyn fashion designers and others who are marketing and selling their products. The workshop will also discuss what it takes to do the “leg work” to communicate, market and brand your products and self in a tough economy.

    Speakers:

    TRUE, Artist/Designer, NY: marketing and branding
    Michele Washington, Graphic Designer, NY: marketing and branding
    Kissa Thompson, Fashion Designer, NY: fashion design, marketing her brand, buttafly unlimited
    Javaka Steptoe, Illustrator, NY: illustration and marketing his book
    Manreet Deol, Product Designer, India (via Skype): marketing products

    Moderated by Atim Annette Oton, designer/co-founder, BDNN: the right products, social media and packaging your work

    RSVP: atim@blackdesignnews.com

    Bios of speakers:

    TRUE is an artist / designer / resident of Brooklyn. He is an alum of Sarah Lawrence College and The Cooper Union Art School (where he got his BFA in 1996), and has been described by International Design Magazine as among the world’s “leading design innovators [whose work] offers a glimpse into the future of design.”

    He has taught and / or spoken on art, new media, & design at institutions such as The Cooper Union, The New School / Parsons School of Design, The Pratt Institute, Rhode Island School of Design, and Sarah Lawrence College, and has exhibited work in museums in the US and abroad. Visit his website at http://www.TRUEart.biz


    Michele Y. Washington is interested in researching the impact of cross-cultural design and users of products, and how designers can best utilize research to more effectively address ethnic communities, as well as the role architecture, urbanism, visual and material culture, and fashion plays in our every day lives. Michele maintains a design consultancy the office of michele washington where she focuses her research on community-based non-profit groups and cultural institutions.  Previously she worked as a designer and art director, for  such publications as The Chicago Tribune; The New York Times; Business Monthly, Essence, and Self. She also teaches in the Graduate Exhibition Design Program at Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City. She has served on the board of the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA), New York chapter, and currently serves on the advisory board of XCD Cross-Cultural Community, and the AIGA Design Journey. Currently she is pursuing a second Master’s at the School of Visual Arts, in Design Criticism.  Michele writes and administers Cultural Boundaries, a blog, http://culturalboundaries.com/wordpress/

    Kissa Thompson is a Brooklyn based designer who runs Buttafly Unlimited and creates an eclectic blend of urban fashion accessories, including a stunning crochet ‘Diva Collection’, as well as line of inspirational t-shirts.

    She is the Founder of ButtaFly Unlimited/Creator of “I Love My Hair” Tees. Kissa Thompson can credit her grandmother for the success of her company.

    Visit her website at www.buttaflyunltd.com

    Javaka Steptoe, an eclectic young artist, designer, and illustrator, is building a national reputation as an outstanding contributor to the genre of children’s literature. His debut work, In Daddy’s Arms I Am Tall: African Americans Celebrating Fathers, earned him the Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award, a nomination for Outstanding Children’s Literature Work at the 1998 NAACP Image Awards, a finalist ranking for the Bluebonnet Award for Excellence in Children’s Books, and countless other honors. His current book is Jimi: Sounds Like a Rainbow. A Story of the Young Jimi Hendrix is published by Clarion Books. Steptoe earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art.

    Visit his website at www.javaka.com

    Manreet Deol is an Indian product designer who was educated in India and at Parsons School of Design in the US. Last year, she returned to work in India and has been working on developing new ideas and products based on Indian culture and crafts.

    She writes a blog, http://manreetdeol.blogspot.com/

    Moderator:

    Nigerian-born, U.S. and British educated architectural designer, Atim Annette Oton is a cultural writer/editor/publisher of Calabar Magazine, entrepreneur of Calabar Imports and co-Founder of Black Design News Network. In 2006, she stepped down from her role as the Associate Chair of Product Design at Parsons School of Design to concentrate on a bi-monthly lifestyle publication about black Brooklyn home décor, fashion, culture, and lifestyle, Calabar Magazine and to open ZimaZee, a store in Lagos, Nigeria. She studied architecture at the City College of New York in Harlem under the influential black architect Max Bond (who she later worked for) and has a Masters degree from the Architectural Association Graduate School in London, England. She returned to New York in 1994 to work with the architecture firm, Davis, Brody, Bond Architects and various other firms in New York. In 2000, she was part of the design team that won the African Burial Ground Interpretive Center. She also worked as an executive producer and design consultant on the Underground Railroad Experience, a cultural education website from 2000 – 2004; and won an Independent Grant from the NYSCA on her work, the Black Hair Salon in 2002. In 2002 and 2004, she participated as a designer for the 3rd and 4th Annual Bridge Street Development Corporation’s Bed Stuyvesant Design Showhouses. She has been a consultant to the Bronx Council on the Arts for its Artisan Institute, an innovative idea focused on micro-enterprise for craftspeople in the Bronx.  Oton served as the editor-in-chief and executive vice president for Blacklines Magazine, a quarterly magazine publishing features on black designers in architecture, interior design, construction, development and the arts from 2000-2002 and co-organized Blacklines’ Conference and Design Showcase and exhibitions. Her design work has been published in Architecture Record, Design Build magazine, Design Architecture.com, Oculus and Blacklines magazine and exhibited at the Architectural Association, London, and in New York at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, the Institute for the Research on the African Diaspora in the Americas and the Caribbean (IRADAC), the Bronx Museum of Art and the City College of New York.  She has been profiled in Office.com and Diversity.com for articles on Blacklines Magazine. She has been featured for Calabar Imports on CNN, MSNBC, The Brian Lehrer Show on WNYC. BCAT’s NeighborhoodBeat and CUNY TV. She is a Board Member of Community Board 8 in Brooklyn, a Vice President and co-Chair of Economic Development Committee, a member of the City College of New York’s Architecture Alumni Group, National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA) and was a member of the National Association of Minorities in Communications (NAMIC).

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  • haiti-20

    Black Design News Network (BDNN): Its evolution and how it became involved in Haiti

    by Atim Annette Oton, co- Founder, BDNN

    “Architecture is Revolution. Architecture is Social Change. It is about changing the world for the better through design and action”.   – The late architect, J. Max Bond [1]

    Dateline: October 8, 2009 – St. Louis, Missouri

    A panel discussion on African Design History at the 2009 NOMA Conference with Jack Travis, Renee Kemp-Rotan and William Stanley spurred the desire for a need for a funded “institute, place, vehicle or organization” to document the work of black architects, do research and promote the work of black architects”. At that meeting, I spoke about taking that the mantle and I committed to search for funds. I also asked for a commitment of support from the three panelists and from Dr. Curtis Sartor, Dean and Professor of Art, Design and Architecture at Judson University, and the only African American Dean of an architecture school in the US, who was in the audience.

    Dateline: October 15-December 15, 2009 – Brooklyn, New York and Birmingham, Alabama

    By the end of October, and back in New York, I began conducting an extensive grant search process to create the institute which I envisioned as online news agency and distribution service. By November, I had a series of grants and zeroed in on a distinct one that could potentially seed, develop and fund the project. The Knight Ridder News Challenge Grant was the perfect vehicle to create this new venture. The grant was to “seek innovations that use new or available technology to distribute content in local communities with three rules to apply: Use digital, open-source technology; distribute news in the public interest and test your project in a local community[2].

    Over the month, I reached out to Renee Kemp-Rotan, Jack Travis, Bill Stanley and also to Curtis Sartor for support. Renee Kemp-Rotan eargerly jumped on board to fully participate in the process as she saw the “astronomical potential” of the project while the others committed to supporting the project. The idea became Black Design News Network (BDNN) and over about a month, Renee Kemp-Rotan (based in Birmingham, Alabama) and I (based in Brooklyn, New York) diligently and creatively crafted and evolved BDNN. For the grant, we evolved that:

    Using an interactive open-source online platform, Black Design News Network (BDNN) will create and disseminate local stories and content about our target group – black designers (African, African American and Caribbean) and underserved designers (Hispanic) in the fields of Architecture/Interiors; Industrial/ Product Design; Visual Communications/Graphics, and Fashion/Textiles.[3]

    Since of the number of black architects was about 2000, we recognized that the community small compared to what the grant focused on and we expanded the idea to include black and underserved designers. We saw the potential of BDNN as a think-tank, a generator of projects and enterprising research institute. We envisioned it as “a creative hive, a “work-space” hub for designers to develop projects, exchange ideas and share expertise across disciplines, without regard to geographic borders” [4]. We idealized about social change and ironically, the connection to Haiti was this bold statement we wrote below:

    This collaborative work space offers new ways to produce projects that benefit the public interest.  These might include creating possible design solutions for sheltering the homeless in New York City, constructive solutions for recovery in New Orleans and other areas where natural disasters occur on a regular basis (the Carribean, etc.) or a Sustainability Model for Lagos, Nigeria that could be investigated by a team of interdisciplinary designers.” [5]

    On December 15, we submitted the grant proposal expected a decision either way by January 15. It was clear to Renee Kemp-Rotan and I, that we had created, innovated and pioneered a extraordinary idea that needed to be a start-up in the genre of Silicon Valley ventures. Thus, we took our cue and began to look at the business as a Silicon Valley start-up and searched for grants, and venture capital funding.

    TIMELINE: Jan 12, 2010: THE HAITI EARTHQUAKE


    On January 12, as I watched the Haiti Earthquake unfold on CNN like so many others, I could not stop feeling powerless but by the next day, I realized, as a trained designer, I was not helpless. And I went back to my roots and philosophy on why I studied architecture – a belief in architecture as a social change engine – and as a student of the late architect Max Bond, a belief in something he was said to me when I was deciding to attend City College: “Architeture is Revolution. It is about changing the world for the better through design and action”. I recalled September 11 when I was watched the towers fall down from infront of Parsons School of Design and how I as a product design department associate chair – lead by the chair Anthony Whitfield, reconciled to have our students act and deal with the tragedy as designers.  Thus, when it came to Haiti, I had to take action and began by “pressing the button” and sending emails to black architects and design thinkers about the need to engage in Haiti.

    Dateline: January 13, 2010, Brooklyn, New York

    GROUND ZERO – BDNN ENGAGING AND CONNECTING THE DOTSINITIATING NOMA

    I sent the following email to Steven Lewis, president of NOMA, Renee Kemp-Rotan and 35 others, other designers and design thinkers including 10 black architecture firm owners like William Stanley, Curtis Moody, Phil Freelon and Jack Travis.

    “Steven, I have 2 key suggestions:

    1.  I think a statement from NOMA and a press release calling black architects to consider to assist, volunteer, contribute funds to Haiti, Haitian organizations such as YELE, FOLKAI, Doctors without Borders, etc.

    2. I would like to suggest that NOMA and Black Architects consider contacting USAID to see what help and assistance can be given to Haiti – based on the earthquake.

    The first priority seems to be a need for doctors but in times of crisis, and as the country goes forward, there will be a need for reconstruction, urban planning, development and architecture. Any thoughts” [6]

    This trigger was the impetus for engaging in Haiti personally and professionally as the co-Founder of Black Design News Network (BDNN). The responses I received tell the story of how designers gather as a collective to develop strategies for social change even in crisis and are best read below:

    Re: Black Architects, NOMA and Haiti Earthquake

    From: Steven Lewis To: atim oton

    Brilliant. Can you draft something for me to use as the basis for such a statement? I have inroads at USAID, so can probably get it in front of the right folks, but am time-challenged right now. Any help would be great to expedite this important mission. thanks, Steve

    I agree with the two suggestions!      Curt Moody

    I can recommend the organization Building Goodness out of Charlottesville. They have experience in design/build community work in Haiti, and in disaster recovery after Katrina on the Gulf Coast. They do not have plans yet but will post news here:  http://www.buildinggoodness.org/index.php/news/. At some point they will be looking for volunteers.                Bryan Bell

    Those of us who have done business with USAID and its associated agency ASHA (American Hospitals and Schools Abroad) might consider co authoring a letter to both agencies offering our assistance. While it is true that planning and development efforts logically follow some time after the rescue and retrieval efforts, the centuries of neglect of that country probably warrants a mammoth rebuilding effort akin to the  Marshall Plan (or at the very least the Katrina effort). I will be in that part of the Caribbean for the next five days and will inquire of other practitioners what their plans of action might entail. Another idea is to utilize the services of our members who have specific experience with design in seismic regions.

    Thanks. Bill Stanley

    Atim, Following on the thought in Bryan Bell’s earlier email, Architects Without Borders and Architecture for Humanity are both groups that would have core initiatives to assist in this endeavor. We may even want to align ourselves with architect organizations in the Caribbean, e.g., Jamaica Institute of Architects, Barbados Society of Architects, etc. as well as organizations like OECS. Patrick Williams[7]

    Steven Lewis’ response to my initial email set off the development of a press release by Renee and I for NOMA, the creation of the program and a committee to discuss how to engage in Haiti. What was set in motion ironically is what Renee Kemp-Rotan and I had conceived – an entity like BDDN to initiate action and involve designers. Thus, BDNN became a news bureau, online magazine, digital library and ‘workspace’ hub for designers.

    The opportunity to create the press release also made us aware that Haiti was tri-lingual and we distributed in English and French – to 200 press people. We never did get it translated into Creole. We proved our thesis and the viability of BDNN as a news bureau as the press release got about 35 write-ups from Architecture Record to architecture blogs.  BDNN participated and assisted NOMA in the creation of its Service in Solidarity (SIS) Committee on Haiti (of which Renee Kemp-Rotan and I were committee members as BDNN co-founders and NOMA members) and we were on board for spearheading the donation $10k for CHF International (an organization already working in Haiti) rather than the original idea of having initial members collect and send tents to Haiti (a good idea but logistically problematic when the country was in crisis).

    Photo shows the damage after an earthquake measuring 7 plus on the Richter scale rocked Port au Prince Haiti just before 5 pm, January 12, 2010. Photo Credit: UN Photo/Logan Abassi, United Nations Development Programme

    As a think-tank, Renee and I saw BDNN’s core focus on Haiti to get designers involved – socially, ethically and responsibly and to create new ways of thinking about disasters and crisis. We activated strategic thinking as core to seeking viable and well-thought out solutions. In this vain, the strategy was to get NOMA to the table with the decision makers in Haiti and in the US.

    BDNN – The Plan and Projects: Pioneering Innovation

    For BDNN to be a think tank and location for information, an online “beta site” (blog) was launched just after the Haiti Earthquake with the goal to have a fully developed comprehensive site by December 2010.  The goals for BDNN this year include:

    • Utillize Social media as a tool for spreading the news, BDNN is on Twitter, Facebook, Linkedin

    —  Focus on being an issue oriented site: We settled on on Disasters this year. And n this vain, BDNN developed DISASTER SOS: HAITI, a panel discussion at NECON in June 2010; produced an all-day Haiti Conference Post-Earthquake Haiti : Disaster + Design in the Diaspora at the NOMA Conference in October 2010, applied for grants entitled DA BRONX SOS and CITIES UNDER SIEGE: Disaster in the Diaspora is an online publication led by members of Black Design News Network (BDNN) and victims of disaster to collectively investigate the impact of natural and made-made disaster in chronically underserved communities, worldwide; and  targeting citizens of communities of color suffering ‘disaster’: The Earthquake & Port Au Prince, Haiti; Katrina, The Flood & New Orleans; Blight & The Bronx.

    • —  Develop initiatives with designers and organizations via a Partnership Strategy and model.

    As of today, we have worked with Rodney Leon supporting the Haiti Softhouse, NOMA, Lesley-ann Noel and Trinidad designers on their Big Give for Haiti, The Archive Institute on its competition, “Kay e Sante nan Ayiti”, Housing and Health in Haiti; Brooklyn Fashion Gallery on Haiti discussions. We have also partnered with Focus on Design, Designers 421, and Project Osmosis on Disaster SOS: Haiti, the Bronx Council on the Arts on several grants and their partnership with the AIA Diversity and Inclusion on sponsoring Post-Earthquake Haiti : Disaster + Design in the Diaspora in Boston.

    • BDNN has worked on a series of grant applications to help us develop the site and develop its content and perspective. We have applied for a Knight News Challenge Grant, Graham Foundation, MacArthur J-Voices, NYC Seed Start, and other grants for BDNN with projects that would expand the reach and scope of what we currently cover.
    • Support Design Research. The Haiti Culture Code is one such initiative, authored by Renee Kemp-Rotan, co-Founder of BDNN. She launched a call for papers in July.

    As early as February, BDNN lead the charge in black design to identify the key players and decision makers in Haiti and its Reconstruction. We outlined who black designers should look to: Haitian Government; Haitian people – in Haiti and across the Diaspora; United Nations (UN); World Bank; Clinton Foundation/Clinton Bush Foundation; Inter-American Development Bank (IDB); Congress- in particular Yvette Clarke and Ed Towns in Brooklyn and US Government. They also included: France, Canada, South American and Caribbean Countries; UNA-HAITI – Haitian American/Haitian Diaspora Organization.

    To do this work, Renee Kemp-Rotan and I attended meetings over February 2010 until July 2010 on Haiti – and represented NOMA at some and BDNN at some. These meetings include events held by the UNA-HAITI at the UN; Haitian Cultural Exchange at the Brooklyn Museum; Brooklyn International Development Trade Center (BIDTC) at Brooklyn Borough Hall; Congresswoman Yvette Clarke and USAID event in Brooklyn; Haiti Invitational Summit organized by the American Institute of Architects/Puerto Rico (AIA/PR), and Organization of American States (OAS) Meeting of Haitian Diaspora in Preparation for International Donor Conference in DC.

    In October, BDNN unveiled its Post-Earthquake Haiti:  Disaster + Design in the Diaspora, a one-day conference to update NOMA, Boston design comnmunity, the Haitian Diaspora and others about Haiti. We presented four panels:

    • PANEL 1- Post-Earthquake Haiti as a Physical System: Rebuilding the Country: The Full Monty Update
    • PANEL 2: Post-Earthquake Haiti as a Social System: Rebuilding the Family: Women and Children at Risk
    • PANEL 3 Post-Earthquake Haiti as a Cultural System: Rebuilding Identity: The Haiti Culture Code- Architecture, Disaster + Cultural Identity
    • PANEL 4 – Post-Earthquake Haiti as an Economic System: Rebuilding the Economy: Getting Work in Haiti

    More details on this one-day conference will be online soon.

    On Haiti and at our website, www.blackdesignnews.com, BDNN has and is continually gathering information, seeking articles and content on Haiti, Design and Reconstruction. Our goal was also to become the culture experts on Haiti and the place to go to for information on Haiti. In that end, we created an online newsletter to reach our audience – black designers and to begin to create a database of subscribers.

    As we evolve, BDDN will identify black designers who ‘infuse unique identity into creative culture’ and transform ‘the aesthetics of dominant culture’, via 4 web-based components:  1.) a digital news bureau to broadcast; 2.) an online magazine to document the work; 3.) a digital design studio/workspace to collaborate; and 4.) a digital library to archive exemplary design, education, practice projects that serves to promote the worldwide contributions of designers from the African Diaspora.

    We consider BDNN as a clearing house, and have coined the slogan: BDNN is the 411 of the black design diaspora, as envision a global reach.

    __________________

    [1] This is an excerpt from my discussion and meeting with the Dean Max Bond in 1987 at City College when I was trying to decide to attend City College.

    [2] Retrieved from Knights News Challenge Website: http://www.newschallenge.org/

    [3] Oton, Atim Annette and Renee Kemp-Rotan (2009), Black Design News Network (BDNN), a proposal for the Knights News Challenge Grant, Submitted December 15, 2009.

    [4] Oton, Atim Annette and Renee Kemp-Rotan (2009), Black Design News Network (BDNN), a proposal for the Knights News Challenge Grant, Submitted December 15, 2009.

    [5] Ibid.

    [6] Oton, Atim Annette, Personal Haiti Email Archive, Discussions, January 13, 2010 – July 2, 2010.

    [7] Oton, Atim Annette, Personal and part of BDNN’s Haiti Email Archive, Discussions, January 13, 2010 – July 2, 2010.

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  • haiti-design

    2010 Haitian Design Showcase in NY – October 4

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  • Phil Freelon FAIA is coming to town.  Atlanta …that is

    Phil Freelon FAIA is coming to town. Atlanta …that is

    NOMAtlanta is proud to be part of this year’s Atlanta Design Week being held October 23-31st , 2010.

    As part of the Design Week activities NOMAtlanta has invited award winning Architect, Philip Freelon, FAIA, the architect for the new Atlanta Center for Civil and Human Rights to speak about Museum Design.

    This presentation will be held October 27, 2010, 7:00PM  at the Savannah College of Art and Design Auditorium located at 1600 Peachtree Street North West,Atlanta GA 30309. We were lucky to get sponsors such as SCAD, Center for Civil & Human Rights Partnership, Gude Management Group, Cousins Properties inc, Gallagher & Associates, Sykes Consulting, Inc, and HOK. So please join us and if you have any questions please don’t hesitate to contact us. Thank you. Please RSVP via jerome.martin@nomaatlanta.org

    2010 NOMA Atlanta Chapter Members:  Free

    All Students and Faculty: Free

    Non-Members:$10

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  • The First Haitian Arts and Culture Forum:  Remake the Landscape, Retain the Spirit: Strategies for the Rebirth of Haiti through Her Arts and Culture

    The First Haitian Arts and Culture Forum: Remake the Landscape, Retain the Spirit: Strategies for the Rebirth of Haiti through Her Arts and Culture

    The First Haitian Arts and Culture Forum: Remake the Landscape, Retain the Spirit: Strategies for the Rebirth of Haiti through Her Arts and Culture

    August 20-21, 2010

    See it live at http://www.ustream.tv/channel/haiti-cultural-economy-forum

    Kylti formulates cultural, governmental, educational and fiscal policies and strategies to establish ‘an arts and culture agenda‘ for Haiti. Leaders and communities around the world recognize the vital importance of culture’s economic contribution to society. The Haiti Cultural Economy Forum (HCEF) has invited Haitians from all over and Friends of Haiti to discuss culture and its role in building a stronger economy and society for Haiti, while fostering opportunities for partnership in areas of mutual interests.

    HCEF is designed to build cultural, artistic, and economic development opportunities through the convening of like-minded Haitian leaders and Haiti supporters from around the world. This forum provides participants an opportunity to mobilize available assets, identify needed resources to ARTiculate Haiti’s future, its prosperity, and explore new partnerships. Kylti is encouraging all business, cultural, and academic leaders in Haitian society to participate in HCEF to develop a strong society and economy for Haiti.

    Embassy of Haiti

    2311 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20008-2802

    More details at

    http://www.haiticultureforum.com

    http://www.kylti.org/

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