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Word, Shout, Song: Lorenzo Dow Turner Exhibit

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Word, Shout, Song exhibit in Florida through December

November 28, 2013  Filed under METRO

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Collection documents three interconnected cultures across three continents

BY PENNY DICKERSON SPECIAL TO THE FLORIDA COURIER

The historical contributions to language by Lorenzo Dow Turner debuted on Sept. 12 at the Ritz Theatre and Museum in Jacksonville in a traveling art exhibit that invites public view through Dec. 31.

“Ring Shouters, 1930’’ is part of the “Word, Shout, Song: Lorenzo Dow Turner “Connecting Communities through Language’’ exhibit on display at the Ritz Theatre and Museum in Jacksonville.

“Ring Shouters, 1930’’ is part of the “Word, Shout, Song: Lorenzo Dow Turner “Connecting Communities through Language’’ exhibit on display at the Ritz Theatre and Museum in Jacksonville.

“Word, Shout, Song: Lorenzo Dow Turner Connecting Communities through Language’’ is a vibrant offering representative of one distinguished scholar’s unwavering commitment to “innovative research in comparative linguistics and Creole studies.”

The collection includes an inimitable compilation of artifacts, photographs, and text covering three interconnected cultures across three continents: the Gullah/Geechee communities of South Carolina and Georgia; the Afro-Brazilian community of Bahia Brazil; and the West African cultures from which the aforementioned two derived.

Journey for truth A Florida presence is relevant to the exhibit as the congressionally sanctioned Gullah Geechee Cultural Heritage Corridor (GGCHC) now extends from North Carolina’s eastern coast and in 2012 broadened its southern-half to include Jacksonville and St. Augustine. Continue Reading »

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The Kinsey Collection: African American Family Debuts Cultural Exhibit at Walt Disney World

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A Whole New World: The Kinsey Collection

An art and history loving African American Family debuts their coveted  collection at Walt Disney World

By Penny Dickerson

A Whole New World: The Kinsey Collection

“The Walls” from the Kinsey Collection

If the art of sharing were worth its weight  in gold, the amassed cultural treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey  would easily personify Ft. Knox. The philanthropist couple have gathered 400 ‘authentic and rare art, artifacts, books, documents and manuscripts that tell  the often untold story of African American achievement and contributions.’ The  culminating result is an impressive touring exhibit spanning more than 400 years  of history aptly titled, “The  Kinsey Collection: Shared Treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey.”

More than 3 million people in seven U.S. cities including the Smithsonian  Institute in Washington, D.C. have been exposed and culturally enriched. And  now, a global audience can experience ‘the intersect of art and history’ at Walt  Disney World in Orlando, Florida.

Earlier this month, The Kinsey Collection opened to the public at the  American Heritage Gallery of the American Adventure Pavilion at EPCOT Center  where it will remain until 2016.  The private unveiling took place during  the 6th Annual Disney Dreamers  Academy weekend hosted by Steve Harvey with Essence magazine. The competitive program selects 100 students from across the  country to indulge in four days of mentoring workshops facilitated by  celebrities like gospel sensation Yolanda Adams, American Idol runner-up  Kimberley Locke, Actor Doc Shaw from Tyler Perry’s “House of Payne,” CNN  education contributor Dr. Steve Perry, and more.

Bernard Kinsey─patriarch of the namesake collection─also honored the 2013 cohort with a  historical lecture, “The Myth of Absence” which aligns with the Kinsey’s  ultimate goal: education.Bernard Kinsey Lectures on African American History from The Kinsey Collection

A Disney partnership effectively broadens the collection’s outreach, but a  unique agreement with the Florida Department of Education  fills a void  Kinsey believes is omitted by most African American textbooks. The Kinsey’s  self-published coffee-table book bears the collection’s title and has been  approved to teach K-12 history in Florida schools.

The publication works in concert with the collection as a visual and  kinesthetic educational component. Readers embark upon a 198 page, picturesque  journey in print that begins in 1632 and travels to the present. The art of  Stephen Duncanson and Romare Bearden are complemented by 17th century  documents from historical abolitionist Frederick Douglass and Dr. Martin Luther  King. Jr., whose legacy encouraged everyone to ignite a dream.

“This exhibit presents truth, but is not an exercise in  victimhood,” said Bernard Kinsey to a captive room at EPCOT World  Showplace. “We have the courage to uplift and do justice to an integral part of  American history that dispels the myth that our history is absent from the  whole.”

The Kinsey Collection

The Kinsey Collection Opening at Disney World

Cross-referencing visual slides from the collection, Kinsey’s unwavering  passion for history reverberated as he described the 1832 slavery ‘Bill of Sale’ that inspired the collection. From his confident podium stance to his  matter-of-fact wisdom, he remained candid about everything from the 1619  Mayflower arrival to Buffalo Soldier pride.  Images of black bodies lined  like sardines beneath a slave ship’s belly were displayed along with the dismay  of Dr. Selma Burke’s original mold being used to create Teddy Roosevelt’s  likeness on the American dime. The African American sculptor was never given  credit. Throughout, Kinsey remained unapologetic in his posture that the African  American presence in history is not one of invisibility.

Among the engaged dreamers was 15-year-old Dwight James of Jacksonville,  Florida who expressed genuine excitement: “I loved when he said Christopher  Columbus didn’t discover America. The Indians found America. America has been  re-owned,” said James, who dreams of becoming a writer.

Sharing his sentiments was spoken word artist Husain Abd’Allah from Jamaica,  NY. The ninth grade homeschooler is a Schomburg Junior Scholar in African  American studies who was intrigued by the gallery, “It was such a wonderful  exhibit,” he said. “We got to see how it all came together. They had a lantern  where you just turn the handle and it starts giving you an overview of the  gallery.”

Most impressive for Abd’Allah was Mrs. Fisher’s Cookbook, the first  known cookbook by a Black person. Husein, like many in attandance, had never  heard this information prior to The Kinsey Collection.

It was Carmen Smith, Vice President of Creative Development  of Walt Disney Imageering whose unwavering vision lead to the Kinsey-Disney  partnership. She learned about the Collection from Bob Billingslea, former Vice  President of Corporate Urban Affairs and Minority Outreach, and eagerly  presented the idea to theme park executives. “We saw this as a unique  opportunity,” she said. “More than 20 Disney executives were taken to Los  Angeles, California to view the entire collection. It was simply magical! There  were no hesitations to bring it to the American Gallery.”

The bulk of the Presidential Award-Winning collection remains housed in a  converted wine cellar in the Kinsey’s sprawling Pacific Coast home. Of the 400  available pieces, 40 were hand-selected to comprise the Disney exhibit, but  every six months they will be rotated until the entire collection has been  viewed. To preserve the integrity and protect from light and moisture damage, some items in the exhibit are facsimiles.

Innovative Disney “Imagineers” teamed to create a gallery  experience consistent with attractions throughout the resort’s multiple theme  parts. Their daunting task was to build an interactive exhibit that brings  African American history to life. Anthony Sparks, M.A. served as the  writer/consultant for the project. For more than four months, the University of  Southern California scholar and former stage actor (“Stomp”) worked to perfect  the exhibit. “The big question was how to make a gallery kid-friendly?” he  explained. “My goals were simple: appeal to families, all ages, and create  something that worked on many levels.”

The project further involved condensing vast material to tell a cohesive  story that was not all inclusive but gave a sense of the African American  experience and five tenets of The Kinsey Collection: Hope, Belief, Courage,  Heritage, and Imagination. Lanterns, symbolic of the freedom path, were given  narrative voice by Academy Award winning actress Whoopi Goldberg. Additional  A-list celebrities lending their sound were Chaundra Wilson and James Pickens,  Jr. (Grey’s Anatomy), Kerry Washington (Scandal), ABC News Anchor Diane Sawyer,  and others.

For Kinsey and wife Shirley, the realization of their cultural inheritance  is an overwhelming achievement and accomplishment. “It now has a voice, a name,  a personality,” offered Kinsey.

The Kinsey Family serves as a formidable example of African  American resilience and strength. The Florida A&M University alums met  during the civil rights movement and remain married 40 years later.  Both  are Xerox Corporation retirees who mastered  saving money in their  early lives together. The dividends have allowed them to travel more than 91  countries and help raise more than $22 million dollars to support HBCU’s. Their  son Khalil currently serves as general manager of operations for The Kinsey  Collection. While in grade-school, he exhibited an inquisitive nature regarding  his family history. Both parents eagerly addressed his cultural thirst. The rest  is Kinsey history.

Penny Dickerson is a Florida-based independent journalist. She is a  frequent contributor to the Florida Courier, Florida Times-Union and other  regional and national publications. Her work can be viewed at  pennydickersonwrites.com.

Read more at EBONY http://www.ebony.com/entertainment-culture/a-whole-new-world-the-kinsey-collection/2#ixzz2O85PQzHQ

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African Americans and Cancer: The ugly truth

 Welcome to the second entry in my series:  African Americans and Cancer: The ugly truth.

This narrative follows the first subtopic: Dispelling Myths. What better to follow myth than truth?

My passion, perspective, and guided expertise is fueled by my own cancer survival which convinced me that  medical racial disparities exist because both cancer and science are confusing

The photo above is resonant of an African American in a physician’s office listening intently, but leaving perplexed and overwhelmed by doctorese or medical mumbo jumbo.  African Africans are visual people.  We also have a high propensity to audio (ahem..music), but we identify best with what we see and as a result, what cancer looks like too often precedes what cancer really is.

The clinical definition of cancer:

Cancer /ˈkænsər/ is a class of diseases in which a group of cells display uncontrolled growth, invasion that intrudes upon and destroys adjacent tissues.

Image: Cancer Cell Under Attack Continue Reading »

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Jennifer Hudson’s Wealth and Weightloss for Lunch

http://speakingofwomenshealth.com/about/

I’ve got a great recommendation for you to endeavor next week.

Spunk up your lunch hour by supporting public broadcasting and also obtain new information regarding a very important aspect of your health: weight loss (gasp!)

By now, we have all witnessed the new and improved Jennifer Hudson of Dream Girls fame emerge high school-skinny as the new champion of  “Weight Watchers.” Congratulations Jennifer. Post Oscar and post-partum baby fat  has never looked better on a more deserving woman. Less weight and wealthier. Could this work for me?

Jennifer Hudson Lands a $1 million book deal on weight loss memoir

http://www.musicrooms.net/showbiz/35290-Jennifer-Hudson-%E2%80%98lands-$1million-book-deal%E2%80%99.html Continue Reading »

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Great to be “GRATEFUL”

grate·ful  [greyt-fuhl]

adjective
  1. warmly or deeply appreciative of kindness or benefits received; thankful: I am grateful to you for your help.
  2. expressing or actuated by gratitude: a grateful letter.
  3. pleasing to the mind or senses; agreeable or welcome; refreshing: a grateful breeze.
My emotions have been extraordinarily unpredictable this past month. Without sounding like a martyr for illness, allow me to initially share with some and once again reiterate to others that I was hospitalized most of the month of August 2011.
While I have mastered the art of “persona facade,” it has been a struggle of often monumental proportions. It is incredibly easy to have others think you have it all under control and that what you’re going through is “much ado about nothing,”  (hint: I specialize in the latter). In hindsight and spiritual retrospect, I can attest that each and every experience we endure while privileged enough to be on this earth is:
  1. All part of God’s plan.
  2. A matter of miles towards a longer journey.
  3. A precious piece to what often appears like a painful puzzle.
Even when it appears that misery is winning by an overwhelming margin, It all works to together for good in the end (see Romans 8:28).
Through the years, I’ve learned to question less and search more for the lesson. We endure challenges and hardships for a reason and if your faith is rooted and strong, you know that it is only for a season and to ultimately perfect you for a greater assignment that God has prepared for you.

Continue Reading »

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“The Disparity Despair”

Medical disparities: Confronting race in care | jacksonville.com.

Disparity is such a powerful word. I phonetically love the wicked hiss of the s, but the prefix dis (or should it be diss?), really says it all.

I also appreciate how a unified cabal of urban slang warriors decided one more haughty “s” should alter the definition so that it short-means: disrespected.

It doesn’t matter what noun it’s paired with, the end result is that someone, or some entity, always seems to get “dissed.”

Disparities are curiously present in all things that liberate and uphold one’s civil rights including gender, class, ethnicity, religion, age, sexual preference, and politics. I must commend the daunting word for always resonating  both irony and equity; rarely is anyone disparity spared.

The single disparity that relentlessly musters a “jerk my chain” cliche is: medical, which is what prompted me to expeditiously hyperlink.

Health Care, including affordability and access, has become a hotbed of discussion for social injustice. It’s heated, it’s controversial, it’s personal. Disparities usually are.

Given my medical history and challenges as an African American woman whose economic level has shifted from comfortable, middle-class to will kill for food, I am a life-time member of the coalition to abolish disparate conditions.

Sharing related reading is a mere mission I gladly embrace, because arming the masses with knowledge is the hallmark of every abolitionist’s success.

I trust you’ll enjoy the shared read and further encourage your due pause for thought. May it ignite discourse and inspire you to use your voice to eradicate what’s disparate. Survey what you believe has dissed you most.