Mike Schreiber has photographed some big names in hip-hop music, but he doesn’t get caught up in the glitz and glam. His latest exhibition opens at Hagedorn Foundation Gallery on Saturday, July 9, 2011, as part of the National Black Arts Festival (NBAF). Since publishing his book, Schreiber has received a lot of attention from [...]
Archive Content by Tag ‘Dawoud Bey’
07/06/11 Capturing Hip-hop’s Softer Side: A Conversation with Mike Schreiber
Category: INTERVIEWS | Tags:
Tags: anti-immigration, Arizona immigration law, Brenda Massie, Creative Loafing, Dawoud Bey, Demetrius Oliver, Drive By Shooting, Fahamu Pecou, Ghana, Hagedorn Foundation Gallery, HB 87, hip-hop culture, J.D. Okhai Ojeikere, Joyce Wilson, LaToya Ruby Frazier, M.I.A., Maino, Malick Sidibé, Mighty Tanaka, Mike Schreiber, Morehouse College, Mos Def, mother, music and art, Nathan Deal, National Black Arts Festival, NBAF, Nkiru Books, Nkiru Center for Education and Culture, Notorious B.I.G., pop culture, pop music, rapper, Rodney Carmichael, Rolling Stone, son, superstar, Talib Kweli, The Source, True Hip-Hop, University of Connecticut, VIBE, Voletta Wallace, XXL magazine
Tags: anti-immigration, Arizona immigration law, Brenda Massie, Creative Loafing, Dawoud Bey, Demetrius Oliver, Drive By Shooting, Fahamu Pecou, Ghana, Hagedorn Foundation Gallery, HB 87, hip-hop culture, J.D. Okhai Ojeikere, Joyce Wilson, LaToya Ruby Frazier, M.I.A., Maino, Malick Sidibé, Mighty Tanaka, Mike Schreiber, Morehouse College, Mos Def, mother, music and art, Nathan Deal, National Black Arts Festival, NBAF, Nkiru Books, Nkiru Center for Education and Culture, Notorious B.I.G., pop culture, pop music, rapper, Rodney Carmichael, Rolling Stone, son, superstar, Talib Kweli, The Source, True Hip-Hop, University of Connecticut, VIBE, Voletta Wallace, XXL magazine
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03/02/10 Atlantans are central to the College Art Association
The College Art Association (CAA) held its Annual Conference at Chicago’s Hyatt Regency Hotel on February 10-13, 2010. Reporter Becky Bivens brings the conference home to you. This year’s College Art Association Annual Conference made me want to take my panties off in public. Not because it turned me on, but rather because it promoted [...]
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03/01/10 Dawoud Bey's Class Pictures at Emory Visual Arts Gallery
Dawoud Bey’s traveling show Class Pictures—An Exhibition of Photography features large-scale snapshots of American high school students … and not a lot more. Sentimental and not particularly original, the photographs themselves simply brush the surface of an overdone subject without irony or innovation.


























John Powell: What historic building, if any, was razed to build the Pei building? I
Kwajelyn Jackson: Love love love
naomidasher: Sweet pictures! true to the nature of Marcus Tanner's work! Clearly a
furious styles: Nobody shows the real ATL like Marcus Tanner, it's raw and honest. Ke
FRANK: GOOD STUFF, KINDA REMINDS ME OF JAMEL SHABAZZ'S PICTURES OF HARLEM AND