Art and Africa create social change

Share

While many may enjoy artistic expression simply for its own sake, others use art for the greater good. This spring Eckerd College is hosting a series of forums as part of its initiative called “The Plight and Promise of Africa.”

The college has set up a photography exhibit at the Poynter institute in St. Petersburg about the problems that women face in the Congo. Last night a group of teachers and community leaders accompanied the exhibit with a panel discussion called “The role of Art in Creating Social Change”

Africa is both the cradle of humankind and the poorest continent in the world. Through public lectures, panels, visual and performing arts, and open dialogue, Eckerd College seeks to deepen the understanding of the ongoing violence and suffering in many African nations, as well as the transitions to peace and stability. Some events are at the college, and others, like last night’s panel, will engage the local communities off campus. The curator of the Congo Women exhibit is Leslie Thomas, who is also the director of Art Works.

The photography exhibit was aimed at evoking sympathy from onlookers, and had facts about gender violence on the reverse side of 7 foot tall of images of women and children who suffer in the Congo. Patrick Henry was on the panel to discuss how art exhibits such as the photography exhibit can connect observers to a bigger picture of the community and the world.

Twig Metheny is studying photography and anthropology, and has been to Africa. She thought that the dark theme was important for raising awareness.

Brenda McKnight is with Community Action Stops Abuse, a group that raises awareness about domestic violence. She said display of strong women was enlightening for her.

Alizza Punzalan-Hall is the director of community and media relations for Eckerd college, and is also the co-chair for the Plight and Promise of Africa initiative at Eckerd College. She says that technology and art are not mutually exclusive, and must coexist to be the most effective for implementing social change.

Congo Women exhibit

The Plight and Promise of Africa

The Enough Project

You may also like

Tampa folk singer mixes genres and breaks norms

Listen: Intro Song: Jasmine Air, Noan Partly  Amidst Beyonce’s genre-defying...

Addressing Environmental Urgency on Earth Day with Dr. Fred Harvey

In this episode of "The Healthy Steps Show" on WMNF...

Florida Wildlife Corridor
Florida Supreme Court justices are urged to weigh environmental funding

Environmental groups Thursday urged the Florida Supreme Court to take...

City of Clearwater celebrates Arbor Day

The City of Clearwater is giving out free trees to...

Ways to listen

WMNF is listener-supported. That means we don't advertise like a commercial station, and we're not part of a university.

Ways to support

WMNF volunteers have fun providing a variety of needed services to keep your community radio station alive and kickin'.

Follow us on Instagram

Colors of Jazz
Player position: