Friday, February 29, 2008
CENTRAL CITY PARTNERSHIP MEETING
PLEASE JOIN US
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 20081:00 PM
2020 JACKSON AVENUE
IN THE FIRST FLOOR AUDITORIUM
(ENTER ON SIDE OR REAR)
AS WE EXPLORE THE STATE OF CENTRAL CITY
For more information contact:
Audrey M. Browder, Chair
Central City Partnership
2020 Jackson Ave.
New Orleans, Louisiana 70113
(504) 875-5140
Audrey M. Browder, Chair
Central City Partnership
2020 Jackson Ave.
New Orleans, Louisiana 70113
(504) 875-5140
Saturday, February 23, 2008
Alternative Media Expo
Saturday, Feb 23, 2008
12:00 p.m. to 7:00 pm
"The Warehouse"
12:00 p.m. to 7:00 pm
"The Warehouse"
Contemporary Arts Center
900 Camp Street
New Orleans, LA
Please look for the Ashé Merchandise Tables for great music, clothes, books, artwork, and more!
For more information visit antigravitymagazine.com
Friday, February 22, 2008
FREE Screening of Faubourg Tremé
The Untold Story of Black New Orleans
by Lolis Eric Elie, Dawn Logsdon & Lucie Faulknor
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2008 at 7:00 p.m.
Ashé Cultural Arts Center
1712 Oretha Castle Haley Boulevard
New Orleans, LA 70113
Filmmakers in Attendance
Throughout the 1800s, Faubourg Tremé was home to the most prosperous and politically
active black community in America. Black and white, rich and poor, free and enslaved
individuals and families co-habitated, collaborated and clashed there to create much of
what defines New Orleans culture. Combining pre- and post-hurricane footage with a wealth
of never-before-seen images, Faubourg Tremé: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans is a
riveting tale of hope, heartbreak, endurance and haunting historic parallels.
FREE Admission
Light Refreshments provided by Whole Foods Market
Presented by Ashé Cultural Arts Center, Whole Foods Market, the Ford Foundation, New
Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and the Charitable Film Network.
Additional Screening Date:
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2008 at 6:00 p.m.
The Cabildo, located at 701 Chartres Street
(Writer/Co-Director, Lolis Eric Eli in Attendance)
Part of the My New Orleans is... series presented by The Faulknor Society in association
with The Louisiana State Museum
For more information visit www.tremedoc.com or call(504) 569-9070.
by Lolis Eric Elie, Dawn Logsdon & Lucie Faulknor
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2008 at 7:00 p.m.
Ashé Cultural Arts Center
1712 Oretha Castle Haley Boulevard
New Orleans, LA 70113
Filmmakers in Attendance
Throughout the 1800s, Faubourg Tremé was home to the most prosperous and politically
active black community in America. Black and white, rich and poor, free and enslaved
individuals and families co-habitated, collaborated and clashed there to create much of
what defines New Orleans culture. Combining pre- and post-hurricane footage with a wealth
of never-before-seen images, Faubourg Tremé: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans is a
riveting tale of hope, heartbreak, endurance and haunting historic parallels.
FREE Admission
Light Refreshments provided by Whole Foods Market
Presented by Ashé Cultural Arts Center, Whole Foods Market, the Ford Foundation, New
Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and the Charitable Film Network.
Additional Screening Date:
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2008 at 6:00 p.m.
The Cabildo, located at 701 Chartres Street
(Writer/Co-Director, Lolis Eric Eli in Attendance)
Part of the My New Orleans is... series presented by The Faulknor Society in association
with The Louisiana State Museum
For more information visit www.tremedoc.com or call(504) 569-9070.
Friday, February 15, 2008
A Night with Molifi Asante Jr. at SUNO
The Center for African and African Studies and the Addison C. Carey Political Science Club
at Southern University at New Orleans announce its second major African American History
event. We invite the New Orleans community to hear the distinguish artist Molifi Asante Jr.,
poet, novelist and playwright and son of the Dr. Molefi Asante, renown scholar in Afrocentric
philosophy and study. His lecture and poetic performance will be held this on:
Friday, February 15, 2008
11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p. m.
Southern University
New Orleans Health and Physical Education Building
(The South Campus at 6400 Press Drive)
A reception will follow from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p. m.
Asante Jr. will speak on "Converging African Rhythms through Poetic Voice." The entire
New Orleans Community is invited. Please feel free to contact the African And African Studies
Department for further details.
at Southern University at New Orleans announce its second major African American History
event. We invite the New Orleans community to hear the distinguish artist Molifi Asante Jr.,
poet, novelist and playwright and son of the Dr. Molefi Asante, renown scholar in Afrocentric
philosophy and study. His lecture and poetic performance will be held this on:
Friday, February 15, 2008
11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p. m.
Southern University
New Orleans Health and Physical Education Building
(The South Campus at 6400 Press Drive)
A reception will follow from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p. m.
Asante Jr. will speak on "Converging African Rhythms through Poetic Voice." The entire
New Orleans Community is invited. Please feel free to contact the African And African Studies
Department for further details.
Thursday, February 14, 2008
TOMI Film Festival at Ashé Cultural Arts Center
Advanced badges can be purchased Online at www.tomifilmfestival.org
Single tickets can be purchased before each screening.
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Rates
$45 - Festival Badge
Includes access to all general screening
(Excludes Opening Night & Awards Ceremony)
$25 - Award Ceremony Brunch
Limited Tickets
$7 - Single film program admission
Registration
Ashé Cultural Arts Center
1712 Oretha C Haley Blvd
New Orleans, LA 70113
Thursday: 4pm-7pm
Friday: 2pm-6pm
Cancellation Policy
There are no refunds or exchanges. ALL SALES ARE FINAL.
VENUE
Ashé Cultural Arts Center
TOMI FESTIVAL SCHEDULE
THURSDAY 2.14.08
4pm-7pm: Registration
6pm-8pm: Opening Night Valentines Pre-Party Gala
8pm: Opening Night Film (Special Invite Only)
- Anointed Me (Short)
- From the Mouth Piece on back
Q & A Following
FRIDAY 2.15.08
2pm-6pm: Registration
3pm: Honey & Sting / Song of Time / Everything or Nothing
5pm: The Wannabe / Prison Body: Freedom Soul
7pm: Standing Reign / What Price Passion: Art & Motherhood / Got Purpose?
9pm: 3 Quarters of Face Value / Deeper Love
SATURDAY 2.16.08
12pm: Standing Reign / The Wannabe / Hero The Great / STD: Sexually Transmitted Demons
2pm: Brown Paper Bags / The Chronicles
3:30pm: Love Conquers Al / Creating Karma
5:45pm: Financial Aids / She's Got It (Closing Night Film)
* SCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGE
SATURDAY 2.16.08
9:30 - 11:30PM: Awards Brunch - Ashé
TOMI Film Festival was made possible with support from Ashé Cultural Arts Center
and the Charitable Film Network.
Single tickets can be purchased before each screening.
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Rates
$45 - Festival Badge
Includes access to all general screening
(Excludes Opening Night & Awards Ceremony)
$25 - Award Ceremony Brunch
Limited Tickets
$7 - Single film program admission
Registration
Ashé Cultural Arts Center
1712 Oretha C Haley Blvd
New Orleans, LA 70113
Thursday: 4pm-7pm
Friday: 2pm-6pm
Cancellation Policy
There are no refunds or exchanges. ALL SALES ARE FINAL.
VENUE
Ashé Cultural Arts Center
TOMI FESTIVAL SCHEDULE
THURSDAY 2.14.08
4pm-7pm: Registration
6pm-8pm: Opening Night Valentines Pre-Party Gala
8pm: Opening Night Film (Special Invite Only)
- Anointed Me (Short)
- From the Mouth Piece on back
Q & A Following
FRIDAY 2.15.08
2pm-6pm: Registration
3pm: Honey & Sting / Song of Time / Everything or Nothing
5pm: The Wannabe / Prison Body: Freedom Soul
7pm: Standing Reign / What Price Passion: Art & Motherhood / Got Purpose?
9pm: 3 Quarters of Face Value / Deeper Love
SATURDAY 2.16.08
12pm: Standing Reign / The Wannabe / Hero The Great / STD: Sexually Transmitted Demons
2pm: Brown Paper Bags / The Chronicles
3:30pm: Love Conquers Al / Creating Karma
5:45pm: Financial Aids / She's Got It (Closing Night Film)
* SCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGE
SATURDAY 2.16.08
9:30 - 11:30PM: Awards Brunch - Ashé
TOMI Film Festival was made possible with support from Ashé Cultural Arts Center
and the Charitable Film Network.
Sunday, February 10, 2008
ITVS Community Cinema at Ashé
Please Join Us for the Screening of
BANISHED
by Marco Williams
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10 at 5:00 PM
Ashé Cultural Arts Center
1712 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd.
New Orleans, LA 70113
FREE Admission
From the 1860s to the 1920s, dozens of towns and counties across America violently expelled entire African American communities, forcing thousands of black families to flee their homes. A century later, these towns remain all white. BANISHED tells the story of three of these communities and their black descendants, who return to learn shocking histories. (90 minutes) A short panel discussion will follow the screening.
SPEAKERS:
* Jerald L. White, Charitable Film Network, Founder
* Monique Harden, Advocates for Environmental & Human Rights, Co-Director & Attorney
* Lloyd Dennis, Author and New Orleans Television Personality
* Kalamu Ya Salaam, Author, Teacher & Activist
Hosted by the Charitable Film Network, Ashé Cultural Arts Center, Public Broadcasting Service, Corporation for Public Broadcasting and Independent Television Service.
Friday, February 8, 2008
The New Orleans Video-Voice Project - In Central City
The New Orleans Video-Voice Project aims to bring the voices and perspectives
of the Central City community to a national audience by training community
members to create their own media. Twenty community residents will attend
a 3-day videography training led by experienced filmmakers and local community
leaders. Graduates of the training will use their newly acquired videography skills
to create short films representing perspectives of community health issues in
Central City. The project will culminate in a community screening of the films
at Ashé Cultural Center. Our goal is to build capacity within underrepresented
communities and advocate for public health policy change.
The New Orleans Video-Voice Project was created by two partnering organizations,
Rapid Evaluation and Action for Community Health in New Orleans, Louisiana
(REACH-NOLA) and the Video-Voice Collective. REACH-NOLA (www.reachnola.org)
is a community-academic partnership dedicated to improving access and quality
of healthcare services in New Orleans. The VideoVoice Collective (www.video-voice.org)
brings academic researchers, filmmakers, technology mavens, social justice
champions, and community leaders together to improve the health conditions
of underserved communities through engagement in the filmmaking process.
For more information about this exciting project, please contact:
LARRY CAMPBELL- larrycampbell75@yahoo.com
SHAWNA HERBST- sherbst08@gmail.com (or 504-909-4959)
of the Central City community to a national audience by training community
members to create their own media. Twenty community residents will attend
a 3-day videography training led by experienced filmmakers and local community
leaders. Graduates of the training will use their newly acquired videography skills
to create short films representing perspectives of community health issues in
Central City. The project will culminate in a community screening of the films
at Ashé Cultural Center. Our goal is to build capacity within underrepresented
communities and advocate for public health policy change.
The New Orleans Video-Voice Project was created by two partnering organizations,
Rapid Evaluation and Action for Community Health in New Orleans, Louisiana
(REACH-NOLA) and the Video-Voice Collective. REACH-NOLA (www.reachnola.org)
is a community-academic partnership dedicated to improving access and quality
of healthcare services in New Orleans. The VideoVoice Collective (www.video-voice.org)
brings academic researchers, filmmakers, technology mavens, social justice
champions, and community leaders together to improve the health conditions
of underserved communities through engagement in the filmmaking process.
For more information about this exciting project, please contact:
LARRY CAMPBELL- larrycampbell75@yahoo.com
SHAWNA HERBST- sherbst08@gmail.com (or 504-909-4959)