Archive for September, 2010

Furious Dancing at Busboys & Poets, opening tomorrow, 9/29

Posted by Danielle on Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

photo by yours truly

One of my photos (not the one above, but it does show illustrate some furious dancing) will be included in the group show, Hard Times Require Furious Dancing at the Busboys and Poets on 5th & K, with a reception for the artists tomorrow night, Wednesday, September 29th from 6-8 p.m.

Busboys and Poets
1025 5th Street, NW
Washington, DC
On view: September 29, 2010 – January 9, 2011

Hard Times Require Furious Dancing celebrates the release of author Alice Walker’s latest book of poems by the same name. All of the work is a response to Walker’s poetry as well as the evocative title itself. I’m so excited to have my work included among such a talented group of visual artists.  I hope to see you there if you can make it!

Mambu Badu | A New Photography Collective

Posted by Danielle on Tuesday, September 21st, 2010

I’m so excited to launch this project with two extremely talented photographers. We’ve been working together on this for a while and I can’t wait to see the kind of response we get for our first call for entry.

Mambu Badu // Photography Collective

Mambu Badu is a new photography collective created in 2010 that seeks to find, expose, and nurture emerging Black/African-American female photographers.

“Mambu Badu” is an adaptation of the Swahili phrase “Mambo Bado”, which is loosely translated as “the best has yet to come.” At this moment, we dwell in an exciting space of possibility where we can grow as artists. We invite other Black/African American female photographers to join us in this journey. We approaching our art and this collective with a with a humble heart, a curious nature, and a persevering spirit.

// Founding Members

Allison McDaniel | Allison McDaniel was born in 1985 in Livingston, NJ. She currently lives and works in the Washington, DC Metropolitan Area. She studied at Howard University and Savannah College of Art and Design, where she earned her BFA in Advertising Design.
She is a freelance graphic designer working in branding and identity, and photographer, working in digital and film formats. Additionally, she serves as Associate Editor of Recipes for Good Living, writing about children and healthy eating.

Kameelah Rasheed | Kameelah Rasheed was born in 1985 in East Palo Alto, CA (SF/Bay Area).  She currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.  She has lived in Cape Town, South Africa as an exchange student, Johannesburg, South Africa as an Amy Biehl U.S. Fulbright Scholar, Washington, D.C. as a Harry S Truman Scholar, SF Bay Area, and Southern California. A storyteller, this self-taught artist works mainly with film and digital photography.  Her documentary-based photography has been exhibited in Oakland and San Francisco, CA as well as Brooklyn, NY and Washington, D.C. Her photography has also been published in F-Stop Magazine and Make/Shift Magazine. Kameelah earned her B.A. in Public Policy from Pomona College and her Ed.M in Secondary Education from Stanford University. Kameelah is also a writer. Her writing has been published in The Nation (online), Pambazuka: Social Justice in Africa, WireTap Magazine, Illume Magazine, and Make/Shift Magazine. She currently writes for Change.org as well.

Danielle Scruggs | Danielle Scruggs was born in 1985 in Chicago, IL and currently lives and works in Washington, D.C. Scruggs’ photographs have been exhibited in Los Angeles, Brooklyn, and Baltimore, and  appeared in The Washington Post, Stop Smiling magazine, F-Stop magazine, Preservation Chicago, and Literago. She earned her M.A. in Digital Art from the Maryland Institute College of Art and her B.A. in Journalism from Howard University. Danielle also serves as the Visual Arts editor of the grassroots publication Liberator Magazine and writes about all things photography for the Baltimore Sun‘s Charm City Current collective. She is currently serving as a 2010 fellow in the newly formed Public Media Corps.

The details for submitting to our first online exhibit, Memory // A Call for Photographs,  can be found at our website, www.mambubadu.com. Please email questions, comments, and concerns to  themambubadu@gmail.com.

Memory // A Call for Photographs
What is memory?
The fuel, the burden and force of revolts, movement and heritage.

It is somewhere between Sun Ra’s travels to Saturn, gospel call-and-response, motherships, funeral dirges, and insomnia.

A well-worn groove that bridges prophecies on the future and ruminations on the past to create personal mythologies.  The wishful alchemy of autobiography, religious fantasy, and coerced forgetting.

They are unrecorded microhistories, the foundation of family and the far away look of nostalgia in someone’s eye…the intangible and tangible evidence of life and love.

The ever continuous series of “now this moment” and “now this one, too”; a re-remembered timeline of past/present realities.

Rituals of storytelling as well as the spiritual nature of keeping, recording, and creating time.
The collective forgetting and the collective remembering.

With film and and digital cameras, we are looking for works that explore the boundless concepts of memory, nostalgia, and transition. We seek works that explore the transient and temporal ambiguity that is born from a desire to be boundless and open to the change that comes with the possibility of moving through time, rather than with time. We seek works that reflect on what memory is, how we remember, what we remember, and the memories we wish to forget. Let your work explore the shape and visual sound of the ephemeral; the incarnate and manifesting nature of memory. No memory is off bounds, and all off bounds memories are welcomed.

Sidewalk stories.

Posted by Danielle on Wednesday, September 15th, 2010


Photos by yours truly

It was an African hand carved wooden statue (Yoruba origins, perhaps) that first caught my eye. I was walking down Rhode Island Avenue in D.C. when I saw it sticking out of a red plastic crate. Initially, I kept walking but something told me to go back. I turned on my heel, walked back, and that’s when I saw them—four other crates packed with photo albums and dusty cardboard boxes containing hundreds of color slides. Most of the photos were taken in the mid to late 70s. I have no idea who the people are in these drugstore prints and slides; just that they’re most likely musicians. Several of the slides and photos depict concerts and jam sessions in someone’s living room.

I was only able to salvage a few of the boxes and the photo album. There were dozens of more binders filled with photos but I could only carry so much on my own. I was surprised and saddened to see these materials set out on the sidewalk like so much trash. Photos—especially original materials such as color slides—are invaluable resources. They’re historical documents, really. A reminder of of the people, places and events of a certain era in time. They depict moments that will never happen again, that we will never get back. However, a photograph is a record of that instant that can last a lifetime—if one chooses to take care of it accordingly.

Oddly enough, I came across an article in my hometown alternative newspaper, The Chicago Reader, that relays a similar situation: a DJ, Dave Matos, found a warehouse filled with hundreds of negatives and prints by the barrier-breaking photojournalist Howard Simmons. Simmons documented the Civil Rights movement and also worked as a commercial photographer, shooting portraits of Michael Jordan when he was on the cusp of stardom.

Simmons said something in that article that completely fits with the cache I discovered on Tuesday:

And then there are those moments when you don’t realize what you’ve lost. When people find your images, like Dave did, and get them back to you. He brought back my past. You can’t put a price tag on that.

Charm City Current Happy Hour

Posted by Danielle on Sunday, September 5th, 2010

On Sept. 2, the people behind Charm City Current and the Baltimore Sun took over Teavolve for a happy hour, raffle, and general good times. Yours truly spent the evening catching up with old friends, meeting new charming Charm City folk (insert rimshot here), falling in love with tea-infused blush sangria, and taking photos, of course. You really can’t ask for more than good drinks, good food, and good company. Many thanks to Nancy Knight, Teavolve, and everyone else involved in organizing a great night.