Upcoming Events – Immigrant Alphabet /ialphabet Thu, 20 Aug 2020 17:42:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.8.19 Opening Celebration: An Immigrant Alphabet at Cherry Street Pier /ialphabet/upcoming-events/opening-celebration-an-immigrant-alphabet-at-cherry-street-pier/ /ialphabet/upcoming-events/opening-celebration-an-immigrant-alphabet-at-cherry-street-pier/#respond Tue, 06 Nov 2018 21:01:58 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=1211 With the support of Knight Foundation, Al-Bustan Seeds of Culture is excited that An Immigrant Alphabet will be at Philadelphia’s newest public space, Cherry Street Pier, for the next seven months!

Come out to celebrate the opening of this public art installation created by Northeast High School students in collaboration with artist Wendy Ewald!

Join us between 1:00 and 5:00 p.m. for a family-friendly, free event with hands-on art, music, dance and more.

Throughout the afternoon there will be art-making tables, a meet and greet with the Northeast High School students who created #iAlphabet, and interactive stations around the space with special performances and participatory demos every hour!

What is An Immigrant Alphabet?

During Spring 2017, eighteen Northeast High School students reflected on their immigrant journeys through a collaboration with artist Wendy Ewald. The students chose words to represent letters of the alphabet and worked with Ewald to make photographs in the school courtyard. Expressed as an alphabet, the banners were installed around the Municipal Services Building (MSB) in September 2017. Originally intended to be a four month installation, the display and related programming was extended at MSB until July 2018 due to its timely message and ability to inspire civic dialogue and engagement. Now, we are excited to announce that An Immigrant Alphabet is on display for the second time in Philadelphia for a seven month period (November 2018 – June 2019) at Cherry Street Pier!

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Fattoush Story Circle /ialphabet/events/fattoush-story-circle/ /ialphabet/events/fattoush-story-circle/#respond Fri, 17 Aug 2018 21:00:24 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=1174 Just a few weeks after our #iAlphabet banners came down from the Municipal Services Building windows, we are returning to Thomas Paine Plaza to facilitate a program tying in #iAlphabet themes with the Pennsylvania Horticulture Society’s Farm for the City installation! Join us on Thursday, August 23 from 6 to 8 p.m. to explore how food is an important form of cultural heritage through an interactive poetry workshop and story circle. We will share a recipe for fattoush, a traditional Arabic salad, during the program!

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We Are Deeply Rooted – First Friday Event with PHS on the Plaza /ialphabet/events/we-are-deeply-rooted-first-friday-event-with-phs-on-the-plaza/ /ialphabet/events/we-are-deeply-rooted-first-friday-event-with-phs-on-the-plaza/#respond Fri, 17 Aug 2018 20:23:53 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=1184 Join us on Friday, September 7 from 5:00-8:00 p.m. on Thomas Paine Plaza as we partner with the Philadelphia Horticulture Society at their Farm for the City installation for an evening of art and sharing.

Hosted by Denise Valentine and featuring Afaq Mahmoud, art from our (DIS)PLACED series and #iAlphabet installation, and more. Celebrate the Then, Now, and Next of many immigrant communities through storytelling and visual art. Please join us for the evening!

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Welcoming Week Kick-Off: Book Launch and Interactive Art Making /ialphabet/in-action/welcoming-week-kick-off-book-launch-and-interactive-art-making/ /ialphabet/in-action/welcoming-week-kick-off-book-launch-and-interactive-art-making/#respond Fri, 17 Aug 2018 19:20:21 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=1191 Come kick off Welcoming Week 2018 with an interactive book launch of America, Border, Culture, Dreamer: The Young Immigrant Experience from A to Z, celebrating art as a tool to amplify marginalized voices and jumpstart meaningful dialogue. Hear from Mayor Kenney, meet author and photographer Wendy Ewald, talk with students featured in the book, and create your own art exploring identity, immigration and inclusivity.

 

Co-hosted by Al-Bustan Seeds of Culture, The Free Library, and the Office of Immigrant Affairs.

 

RSVP for this free event here!
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Farm for the City Opening Celebration /ialphabet/upcoming-events/farm-for-the-city-opening-celebration/ /ialphabet/upcoming-events/farm-for-the-city-opening-celebration/#respond Thu, 14 Jun 2018 23:28:15 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=1149 The Pennsylvania Horticulture Society is celebrating the opening of their installation, Farm for the City, on Thomas Paine Plaza in front of An Immigrant Alphabet. The celebration will be held on the plaza (1401 JFK Boulevard) from 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. where speakers will give short remarks followed by an interactive opportunity to help plant. Walk around #iAlphabet and take home a vegetable plant to kick-off the season while you are there!

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Real Talk: Representations & Relationships at NEHS /ialphabet/events/real-talk-representations-relationships-at-nehs/ /ialphabet/events/real-talk-representations-relationships-at-nehs/#respond Fri, 27 Apr 2018 16:56:05 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=744 WHYY and Al-Bustan Seeds of Culture, students, teachers, and administrators are invited to reflect and discuss [...] ]]> Real Talk: Representations & Relationships at NEHS

Co-faciliated by WHYY and Al-Bustan Seeds of Culture, students, teachers, and administrators are invited to reflect and discuss the Northeast High School community, with a series of in-depth conversations to continue next academic year!

Date: Wednesday, May 30, 2018
Times: 12 – 1:30pm
Location: Northeast High School Auditorium

This event is closed to the public*

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Journeys Across Imaginary Lines: Creating & Sharing Immigrant Stories /ialphabet/events/journeys-across-imaginary-lines/ /ialphabet/events/journeys-across-imaginary-lines/#respond Thu, 08 Mar 2018 21:42:11 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=710 Al-Bustan Seeds of Culture and Philadelphia History Museum invite you to attend a participatory workshop and presentation of new poetry and music inspired by An Immigrant Alphabet.

Poets Trapeta Mayson and Frank Sherlock will present their commissioned works followed by an interactive poetry workshop and a premiere of compositions by Jay Fluellen (piano) and Kinan Abou-afach (cello) with Hafez Kotain (percussion) and Valerie Gay (vocals).

Date: Saturday April 21, 2018

Time: 1:00 – 3:30 PM

Location: Philadelphia History Museum

Admission: FREE / RSVP HERE!

1:00 – 1:30 p.m. – Introductions and refreshments

1:30 – 2:00 p.m. – Poetry read by Frank Sherlock and Trapeta Mayson

2:00 – 2:45 p.m. – Collective Poetry Workshop facilitated by Frank Sherlock and Trapeta Mayson

2:45 – 3:15 p.m. –  Music performed by Jay Fluellen, Kinan Abou-afach, Hafez Kotain, and Valerie Gay

3:15 – 3:30 p.m. – Q&A 

* * *

Trapeta Mayson

Trapeta B. Mayson is a member of the Greene Street Artist Cooperative (GSAC). She reads her poetry widely and works extensively conducting poetry and creative writing workshops. Her work sheds light on and honors the immigrant experience as well as amplifies the stories of everyday people. She is a recipient of a Pew Fellowship in Literature, Leeway Transformation Award, Leeway Art and Change Grant and Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Grants. Her work was also nominated for a 2016 Pushcart Prize. She is the author of two books, She Was Once Herself and Mocha Melodies. Her other publications include submissions in The American Poetry ReviewEpiphany Literary JournalAesthetica Magazine, Margie: The American Journal of Poetry among others. Trapeta is a native of Liberia. Her family immigrated to America when she was in elementary school and she has lived in North Philadelphia and Germantown most of her life. She is committed to artistically and thoughtfully developing and contributing to efforts that positively and sustainably impact communities. Currently serving as the executive director of Historic Germantown, Trapeta is a graduate of Temple University, Bryn Mawr Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research and Villanova University School of Business.

Frank Sherlock

Frank Sherlock was the 2014-15 Poet Laureate of Philadelphia, and a 2013 Pew Fellow in the Arts for Literature. His most recent collection of poems is Space Between These Lines Not Dedicated (Ixnay Press, 2014).  Sherlock approaches the work of a poet as conduit, and views writing poems as “collaborations of encounter.” His projects are often collaborative.  The City Real and Imagined (Factory School, 2010) was written with the poet CAConrad as a re-visioning of public spaces in what they refer to as “the City of Otherly Love.”  The two embarked on self-guided psychogeographical wanders through Philadelphia, each beginning at LOVE Park. Sherlock’s time in New Orleans in 2006 resulted in a collaboration with poet Brett Evans, entitled Ready-To-Eat Individual (Lavender Ink, 2008). In an interview with Katy Henriksen for Oxford American: New Orleans & the Gulf Coast Issue, 2008, he remarks: “The cases of DIY rebirth were everywhere around us, and it was a secret that had stayed within the region’s limits. Also, the effects of a city (with virtually no public services) trying to deal with a shared psychic wound of post-traumatic stress, its effect on the kids of New Orleans shuffled across town into schools with more security guards than teachers, the spike in street crime (partly as a result of these things) and other issues of displacement are largely untold stories in the national conversation. But there is also the light and dark magic of the city that cannot be explained in a straight-ahead journalist pursuit. Brett and I decided we could best talk about the state of the city post-Katrina through the medium of poetry.”

Jay Fluellen

Jay Fluellen, D. M. A. is a Philadelphia born musician known as a composer, college professor, educator, accompanist, pianist, singer, and organist/choir director. He has a doctorate in music composition from Temple University in addition to his certification in music from Eastern University. Dr. Fluellen is currently a teacher with the School District of Philadelphia at Northeast High School. He has taught college level courses in the fields of music composition, written and aural theory, music history, piano, and conducting at the following institutions; Morgan State University, Lincoln University, Montgomery County Community College, University of the Arts, and Community College of Philadelphia. He has been commissioned by various performers and institutions, including; The Bucks County Choral Society, Opera Company of Philadelphia, Network for New Music, Relâche, Singing City, Traci Hall Dance Co., The Settlement School of Music, Trinity Episcopal Church, Swarthmore, bass; John Alston, and soprano; Martha Sullivan, among others. Since January 1997, he has been an organist /choir director at the historic African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas, Fr. Martini Shaw, rector.

Kinan Abou-afach

Born in Damascus, Kinan Abou-afach is a cellist, oud player, and composer currently based in Philadelphia. He is a recipient of the 2013 Pew Fellowship in the Arts for his exemplary talent as a performer and composer. He began his musical studies at the age of seven and went on to complete a Bachelors degree in cello performance with a minor in oud performance from the Higher Institute of Music in Damascus. He moved to Chicago in 2000 where he completed his Masters degree in Cello Performance at DePaul University School of Music in Chicago. As a composer, Kinan writes music that is influenced by Eastern and Western traditions. Several of his recent compositions were commissioned by Al-Bustan, notably: “Roads to Damascus” with visual artist Kevork Mourad premiered in February 2013; {De}perception with digital artist Ayman Alalao premiered in May 2015, “Of Night of Solace: Fantasia on Andalusian Muwashshah Poetry” premiered in December 2015, and “Nur: One Breath, One Soul” premiered in April 2016 and most recently “Of Roads and Homes”, commissioned as part of Al-Bustan’s (DIS)PLACED Philadelphia series.

About Valerie Gay
Gay, is an active performer across several genres. Performances include operas, special events and solo concert recitals, including a solo performance at Carnegie Hall. Awarded First Prize at the Summit City Art Song Festival Competition, Val has performed with several artists including Kathleen Battle, Opera Libera, Poor Richard’s Opera, Gospel artists Dottie Peoples and Walter Hawkins, and Jazz trumpeter and composer Hannibal Lokumbe (world premiers). As a keyboardist and conductor, Val has formed and director several Gospel choirs across Philadelphia. She also co-founded the EVER Ensemble, a collective of women musicians who perform diverse musical genres, from classical to hip hop. In 2006,
Val founded Fortress Arts Academy, which provides arts and skill building lessons to children and adults, especially those in underserved communities. Val earned a Professional Studies Certificate and a Master of Music in Vocal Performance at Temple University’s Boyer College of Music and Dance, a Bachelor of Music in Voice Performance from the University of the Arts, and completed degree course work at Peabody Conservatory of Johns Hopkins University.


This component of An Immigrant Alphabet project is made possible with support from PNC Arts Alive and Knight Cities Challenge — An Initiative of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. Overall the project has been made possible with additional support from the Barra Foundation, Philadelphia Foundation, William Penn Foundation, Philadelphia Cultural Fund – Youth Arts Enrichment, The Philadelphia Foundation, Bartol Foundation, Spruce Foundation, Intech Construction, Dolfinger-McMahon Foundation, Individual Donors

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Write Home: Poetry Workshops led by Trapeta Mayson /ialphabet/events/poetry-workshops-trapeta-mayson/ /ialphabet/events/poetry-workshops-trapeta-mayson/#respond Thu, 15 Feb 2018 17:36:12 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=690 WRITE HOME Workshops, inspired by Al Bustan’s An Immigrant Alphabet installation, invite teens and adults to read and write poems about migrations — new beginnings, transitional periods, immigration, family histories, displacement and citizenship.

What memories, experiences and stories about “home” are you holding? This is the place to tell it and write it.

Led by Germantown-based poet and Liberian immigrant Trapeta B. Mayson, these workshops are open to everyone – no writing or poetry experience required.  Participants will spend time generating poems that sing and celebrate home and identity through guided exercises and free writing. It will be an inspiring and affirming afternoon – so bring your imagination!

Dates: Sundays, March 4 and March 18, 2018

Time: 1:30 – 3:30pm

Location: Coleman Library in Germantown:  68 W Chelten Ave, Philadelphia, PA 19144

Admission: FREE

RSVP HERE!

 


Trapeta B. Mayson is a member of the Greene Street Artist Cooperative (GSAC). She reads her poetry widely and works extensively conducting poetry and creative writing workshops. Her work sheds light on and honors the immigrant experience as well as amplifies the stories of everyday people. She is a recipient of a Pew Fellowship in Literature, Leeway Transformation Award, Leeway Art and Change Grant and Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Grants. Her work was also nominated for a 2016 Pushcart Prize. She is the author of two books, She Was Once Herself and Mocha Melodies. Her other publications include submissions in The American Poetry Review, Epiphany Literary Journal, Aesthetica Magazine, Margie: The American Journal of Poetry among others. Trapeta is a native of Liberia. Her family immigrated to America when she was in elementary school and she has lived in North Philadelphia and Germantown most of her life. She is committed to artistically and thoughtfully developing and contributing to efforts that positively and sustainably impact communities. Currently serving as the executive director of Historic Germantown, Trapeta is a graduate of Temple University, Bryn Mawr Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research and Villanova University School of Business.

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Ingredients Across Borders: Sumac /ialphabet/events/ingredients-across-borders-sumac/ /ialphabet/events/ingredients-across-borders-sumac/#respond Wed, 31 Jan 2018 15:33:13 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=680 Join us for a very special evening highlighting sumac, a significant ingredient in cuisines of the Americas and the Middle East. Chef Anan Zahr will show everyone how to prepare musakhan, a popular farmer’s dish from Palestine that is traditionally made during olive oil pressing season to celebrate the harvest. Musakhan features sumac-roasted chicken with fresh bread and onions sauteed in extra virgin olive oil. Participants will also learn how to make traditional Palestinian chopped salad and hummus through hands-on instruction and enjoy samples alongside musakhan. We will share food stories around a communal table, connecting meals to home and place while learning about the roots and routes of the key ingredient. This program is presented in partnership with Al-Bustan Seeds of Culture, as part of An Immigrant Alphabet art installation designed to raise awareness of the experiences of immigrants and refugees.

Date: Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Time: 6:00 – 8:30pm

Location: Free Library of Philadelphia: Culinary Literacy Center – 4th Floor (1901 Vine Street)

PURCHASE TICKETS HERE

About Our Presenters

Owen Taylor is a seedkeeper and facilitator whose work with small scale urban and rural farmers committed to community food sovereignty, cultural preservation and sustainable agriculture led to the creation of the newly formed Truelove Seed Company.

Anan Zahr is a Arab Palestinian American educator and chef with expertise in Near Eastern Studies, Arabic language and community activism.

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Snapshots of Identity – Workshop with Wendy Ewald /ialphabet/events/snapshots-of-identity-workshop-wendy-ewald/ /ialphabet/events/snapshots-of-identity-workshop-wendy-ewald/#respond Tue, 30 Jan 2018 14:02:36 +0000 /ialphabet/?p=667 Snapshots of Identity
Putting Students Behind the Lens

Workshop Flyer

As part of Al-Bustan’s “AN IMMIGRANT ALPHABET” installation at the Municipal Services Building, educators are invited to participate in a workshop with WENDY EWALD, an internationally renowned artist, educator, and author. Known for her documentary investigations of places and communities using a collaborative process working with youth and adults, Wendy will demonstrate literary/photography methods in a hands-on workshop. Similar to her recent project with Northeast High School students, she will guide participants in selecting a theme and working in small groups to write, photograph, and create a collective alphabet.

Date: Saturday, February 24, 2018
Time: 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM
Location: Philadelphia Municipal Services Building 1401 JFK Blvd, 16th Floor, Room E
Fee: $25 | Pre-registration required | 6 ACT 48 credits available through SDP
Register Here

Snacks and Lunch provided.

This workshop is co-presented by School District of Philadelphia, Stockton Rush Bartol Foundation and Al-Bustan Seeds of Culture.

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