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MIAMI-DADE PUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM presents

 

De Word Spoken Amungst We: 
Talking About the World through Gullah/Geechee Culture 
In conjunction with the exhibition 
Gullah Geechee and the 7 Dreams: A project of Gary L. Moore 
Thursday, March 25, 6:30-8:30 p.m. 
2nd floor exhibition space, Main Library, 101 W. Flagler Street, Miami -
305.375.2665 

FREE!

We invite you to be part of a community discussion about the questions
raised by the exhibition Gullah Geechee and the 7 Dreams. A
multidisciplinary panel of practitioners will get us talking. They
include: 

Ralph B. Johnson <http://www.nps.gov/guge/parkmgmt/staffandoffices.htm>
, founding member of the Gullah/Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor
Commission; Professor, Florida Atlantic University School of
Architecture and Director, FAU Center for the Conservation of
Architectural and Cultural Heritage 

Cain Hope Felder
<http://www.pbs.org/thisfarbyfaith/witnesses/cain_hope_felder.html> ,
co-author and editor of the Original African Heritage Study Bible;
professor of New Testament Language and Literature at the School of
Divinity, Howard University 

Peter London <http://www.juilliard.edu/alumni/qa/200802.html> ,
associate professor of dance, New World School of the Arts; visiting
Artistic Director Senior for The Martha Graham Dance Company; and
faculty member, Alvin Ailey summer intensive program 

Noelle Theard <http://www.noelletheard.com/> , independent photographer
and documentarian 

For Gullah Geechee and the 7 Dreams, artist Gary L. Moore
<http://garylmoore.com/>  curated an exhibition based on his perceptions
of the Gullah/Geechee culture of his childhood in Pee Dee, South
Carolina. The show includes his own sculptural and site-specific work,
historical objects and artifacts from private collections, art from the
Library System's Permanent Art Collection, and rare books from the
Florida Collection. The project makes aesthetic and metaphysical
connections between folk culture, spirituality, histories of slavery and
revolution, handmade aesthetics, and contemporary art. The 7 dreams of
the exhibition's title refer to seven ways the culture has survived,
manifested itself and is part of the history of post-slavery
African-American culture. 

As part of the discussion, we might ask: How do folk cultures, languages
and religions continue to be relevant? How does the impact of the
encroaching tourist industry on the culture of the Sea Islands relate to
development and gentrification in an urban area like Miami? How does
this traditional African-American culture relate to contemporary
Caribbean art and culture in Miami? Rather than a traditional panel
discussion in which a group of "experts" speaks to a passive public,
each member of the panel will work with a small group of audience
members. At the end of the evening all of the groups will come back
together as a whole to share their ideas. 

Contact 305-375-5048 or [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>  for more
information.

This project has been funded through a grant from the Alternate ROOTS
Community Artist/Partnership Program, with support from the Nathan
Cummings Foundation and the Ford Foundation. 

To find more about exhibitions and programs coming up at the Library,
check out http://mdpls.org/news/exhibitions/exhibitions.asp
<http://mdpls.org/news/exhibitions/exhibitions.asp> . 


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