May 5th
10:54 PM

[Question authority, sure. But question everybody while we’re at it - because some of these grassroots motherfuckers be on some bullshit too.]

bao phi (via his facebook status)

March 5th
11:00 PM
Via
February 8th
9:20 PM
Via

Kehinde Wiley’s works reference specific paintings by Titian and Tiepolo, but he incorporates a range of art historical and vernacular styles in his paintings, from the French Rococo to the contemporary urban street. Wiley collapses history and style into a uniquely contemporary vision. He describes his approach as “interrogating the notion of the master painter, at once critical and complicit.” He makes figurative paintings that “quote historical sources and position young black men within that field of ‘power.’” His “slightly heroic” figures, slightly larger than life size, are depicted in poses of power and spiritual awakening. He deliberately mixes images of power and spirituality, using them as a filter in the portrayal of masculinity. Kehinde Wiley’s exhibition Infinite Mobility recently appeared at the Brooklyn Museum in New York. (via Deitch)

December 6th
6:30 PM
Via
"The role of the artist is exactly the same as the role of the lover. If I love you, I have to make you conscious of the things you don’t see."
—  James Baldwin (via monamade)
July 25th
5:43 PM
Via
"youths are passed through schools that don’t teach, then forced to search for jobs that don’t exist and finally left stranded in the street to stare at the glamorous lives advertised around them"
—  

Huey P Newton (via foreverbroke)