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Bioneers: Revolution From the Heart of Nature | Bioneers Radio Series
To have any chance of success, highly creative, collaborative uses of new forms of digital media must be a cornerstone of any strategy for progressive social and environmental movements. Four leading innovators in this domain share their insights. Hosted by Matthew Monahan, Namaste Foundation. With: Ben Knight, co-founder of Loomio; Edward West, co-founder of Impact Hub Oakland and Hylo social network; Ingrid Sanders, founder of PopExpert, a crowd-sourced, community-driven platform.
In today's episode of the Not Real Art Podcast, guest host and prolific Los Angeles-based muralist Erin Yoshi speaks with Ashara Ekundayo about the power of joy-informed art for resistance and healing. Ashara is a Black feminist, an independent curator, an artist, and an interdisciplinary creative arts leader committed to an intersectional framework of social transformation that expands the influence and impact of arts and culture on racial and gender equity and environmental literacy, and more specifically one that necessitates a practice of recognizing joy in the midst of struggle. Tuning in, you'll learn more about the work that Ashara does through her nonprofit, Artist as First Responder, which acknowledges that artists show up first in crisis and celebration to forge solutions, heal communities, and save lives through design, practice, invitation, and presentation. Ashara shares her mission to hold space for creative labor, to create beautiful narratives about joy and pleasure in a society so focused on the trauma-informed, and her belief in the power of art and education to create change by showing us opportunities for who we are and what we can be. You'll also discover some of the other remarkable projects, platforms, and exhibitions that Ashara has created and contributed to over the years, as well as some of her favorite artists right now, so make sure to tune in today for this insightful and powerful conversation about the intersection between love, art, joy, and rage! Key Points From This Episode: Ashara reflects on her earliest memories as a ‘gatherer' around the arts and crafts table. How her parents introduced her to art and were formative influences on her practice. Hear about Ashara's career trajectory, formal education, and early desire to be a curator. Learn more about Artist as First Responder (AAFR) and how it facilitates joy as a tool of resistance and a mechanism for healing communities. Ashara explains the six-point philanthropic and interactive arts platform of AAFR. The importance of celebrating artist's work and arts labor as first responder work. How Ashara navigates the traditional arts world as a queer, BIPOC arts leader and creative. Learn about the former Impact Hub Oakland, founded by seven artists, including Ashara. Ashara shares her belief that we are all born creative and her ongoing mission to hold and create space for creative labor. What she looks for in the artists she works with; honesty, curiosity, and enjoyment. What Ashara calls the artist ‘flake out factor' and the importance of authentic commitment. How traveling has influenced her work and the perspective it has offered Ashara. Some of the priorities that have shifted in her personal life following the pandemic. Why she believes having grace and patience with ourselves and each other is the new norm. Discover the self-guided Black Joy StoryWindows exhibition in Downtown Oakland. Hear about BLATANT, a publication of AAFR, and Ashara's ongoing conversation partnership with the Museum of the African Diaspora. Memorable conversations Ashara has had with Black women artists and cultural workers. Ashara on the power art has to create change; witnessing opportunities for what can be. How education goes hand-in-hand with creativity and the legacy of who we are. Artists to watch, including Tongo Eisen-Martin, Tiff Massey, and Zanele Muholi. For more info, visit: https://notrealart.com/ashara-ekundayo-and-erin-yoshi
Impact investing involves working with companies with the intention to generate measurable, beneficial social impact alongside a financial return, allowing investors to showcase their values and intentions. With the application of a gender lens, investors can make responsible decisions that align with their gender values as well as their social values.In this episode, Christine Shaw speaks with Kristin Hull, founder, CEO and CIO of Nia Impact Capital. Kristin shares her experience with impact investing, and how her values are reflected in her company’s practices. In this episode, you will learn: What impact investing is and why it’s importantHow socially responsible investing has changed over the past decades — and why Nia Impact Capital uses a less traditional screening approach when working with companiesThe importance of diversity reporting and how it can change company practicesThe work that Nia Investment Capital is doing in the gender, race and equity spheresAnd more!Tune in to hear from Nia Impact Capital founder and CEO Kristin Hull as she shares the importance of impact investing from a gender and a racial equity point of view!Resources: InvestmentNews | Christine Shaw | Nia Impact Capital | Kristin Hull, PhD | Instagram: Nia Impact Capital | Twitter: Nia Impact Capital | The Money Doula BlogGuest bio: Kristin is a conscious investor empowering individuals, families and organizations to invest in alignment with their values, for the world they want to see. Kristin launched Nia Global Solutions in 2013 to bring activism and impact investing into the public markets. In doing so, she developed Nia’s six solutions-focused investment themes, weaving a gender lens throughout the investment thesis.Kristin founded Nia Community Investments in 2010, a 100% mission-aligned investment fund focused on social justice and environmental sustainability in Oakland. Prior to Nia Community, Kristin served as president and chair of the Board of the Hull Family Foundation from 2007 to 2011, where she oversaw all of the investment efforts, transitioning the endowment from a traditional investment portfolio to one of the country’s first 100% mission impact invested portfolios. Kristin is also a co-founder of Impact Hub Oakland, a co-working space nurturing entrepreneurs and social change makers.Prior to dedicating her career to conscious investing, Kristin served as an educator and classroom teacher. In 1997, Kristin co-founded the North Oakland Community Charter School, and served on the founding board of the George Mark Children’s House, the first freestanding children’s hospice and palliative care center in the U.S.Kristin is devoted to promoting inclusion and diversity in leadership, to re-envisioning capitalism and to changing the face of finance. She serves on the board of directors for the Mosaic Project and Community Action Fund for Women of Africa (CAFWA) and is an advisor to Playworks, the Nicholson Foundation, and ToSomeone.Kristin holds a Ph.D. in Urban Education from the University of California at Berkeley, an M.A. in Research in Bilingual Education from Stanford University. She earned her B.A. and teaching credentials at Tufts University.
Impact investing involves working with companies with the intention to generate measurable, beneficial social impact alongside a financial return, allowing investors to showcase their values and intentions. With the application of a gender lens, investors can make responsible decisions that align with their gender values as well as their social values.In this episode, Christine Shaw speaks with Kristin Hull, founder, CEO and CIO of Nia Impact Capital. Kristin shares her experience with impact investing, and how her values are reflected in her company’s practices. In this episode, you will learn: What impact investing is and why it’s importantHow socially responsible investing has changed over the past decades — and why Nia Impact Capital uses a less traditional screening approach when working with companiesThe importance of diversity reporting and how it can change company practicesThe work that Nia Investment Capital is doing in the gender, race and equity spheresAnd more!Tune in to hear from Nia Impact Capital founder and CEO Kristin Hull as she shares the importance of impact investing from a gender and a racial equity point of view!Resources: InvestmentNews | Christine Shaw | Nia Impact Capital | Kristin Hull, PhD | Instagram: Nia Impact Capital | Twitter: Nia Impact Capital | The Money Doula BlogGuest bio: Kristin is a conscious investor empowering individuals, families and organizations to invest in alignment with their values, for the world they want to see. Kristin launched Nia Global Solutions in 2013 to bring activism and impact investing into the public markets. In doing so, she developed Nia’s six solutions-focused investment themes, weaving a gender lens throughout the investment thesis.Kristin founded Nia Community Investments in 2010, a 100% mission-aligned investment fund focused on social justice and environmental sustainability in Oakland. Prior to Nia Community, Kristin served as president and chair of the Board of the Hull Family Foundation from 2007 to 2011, where she oversaw all of the investment efforts, transitioning the endowment from a traditional investment portfolio to one of the country’s first 100% mission impact invested portfolios. Kristin is also a co-founder of Impact Hub Oakland, a co-working space nurturing entrepreneurs and social change makers.Prior to dedicating her career to conscious investing, Kristin served as an educator and classroom teacher. In 1997, Kristin co-founded the North Oakland Community Charter School, and served on the founding board of the George Mark Children’s House, the first freestanding children’s hospice and palliative care center in the U.S.Kristin is devoted to promoting inclusion and diversity in leadership, to re-envisioning capitalism and to changing the face of finance. She serves on the board of directors for the Mosaic Project and Community Action Fund for Women of Africa (CAFWA) and is an advisor to Playworks, the Nicholson Foundation, and ToSomeone.Kristin holds a Ph.D. in Urban Education from the University of California at Berkeley, an M.A. in Research in Bilingual Education from Stanford University. She earned her B.A. and teaching credentials at Tufts University.
Work. Shouldn't. Suck. LIVE: The Morning(ish) Show with special guests Ashara Ekundayo, Esteban Kelly & Syrus Marcus Ware. [Live show recorded: June 8, 2020.] ASHARA EKUNDAYO is a Detroit-born independent curator, creative industries entrepreneur, cultural strategist, and founder working across arts, community, government, and social innovation spaces. Through her consulting company AECreative Consulting Partners, LLC she designs and manages multidimensional international projects and fosters collaborative relationships through the use of mindfulness and permaculture principles to bring vision to life and create opportunities “in the deep end,” often with unlikely allies. Her creative arts practice epistemology requires an embodied commitment to recognizing joy in the midst of struggle. // In 2012 Ashara co-founded Impact Hub Oakland and Omi Arts and served as the Co-Director, Curator, and the Chief Creative Officer who designed and bottom-lined the brand messaging and creative practice programming of the entire company. In December 2017, she launched Ashara Ekundayo Gallery as a pilot-project social practice platform centering and exclusively exhibiting the artwork of Black womxn and women of the African Diaspora to investigate and inspire social and spiritual inquiry at the nexus of fact, the Black feminist imaginary, and Afrofuturism through visual and performance installation. // She currently holds Advisory Board positions with VSCO.co, Black Girls Code and the Oakland Public Conservatory of Music, and has served as a Fellow with the U.S. Dept. of State Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs, Green For All, Emerging Arts Professionals, Schools Without Borders, and Institute For The Future. Ashara is also a Certified Permaculture Designer, Certified Foresight Practitioner, and a Graduate of Thousand Currents Leadership Academy and Rockwood Leadership – LeadNOW: California. Additionally, she holds an “Embodied Justice” Residency at Auburn Seminary in NYC, and an M.A. in Gender & Social Change from the Korbel School of International Affairs at the University of Denver. // Ashara’s commitment to social transformation is informed by an intersectional framework that aims to expand the influence and impact of arts and culture on racial equity, gender + justice, and environmental literacy. She is a womanist, a meditator, a mentor, and the mother of two sons and three granddaughters. T/IG @blublakwomyn ESTEBAN KELLY is a visionary leader and compassionate strategist who inspires organizers by drawing on science fiction, social theory, and collective liberation. Uniting close friends and long-time co-organizers, Esteban was inspired to co-create AORTA culling together his creative energy and organizational skills for expanding food sovereignty, solidarity economy & cooperative business, gender justice & queer liberation, and movements for racial justice. // Esteban’s work is vast. In addition to working for AORTA, he is the Co-Executive Director for the US Federation of Worker Co-ops (USFWC), and a co-founder and current board President of the cross-sector Philadelphia Area Cooperative Alliance (PACA). // Internationally, Esteban has advocated for workplace democracy through the ICA (International Cooperative Alliance) and CICOPA (the international worker co-op federation), and for land reform and other social movements from Canada to Brazil. // After many years as a PhD student of Marxist Geographers at the CUNY Graduate Center, Esteban has left academia with a Masters in Anthropology. Most recently, Esteban worked as Development Director and then Staff Director for the New Economy Coalition. From 2009-2011, Esteban served as Vice President of the USFWC, and a board member of the Democracy At Work Institute (DAWI) and the US Solidarity Economy Network. He is also a previous Director of Education & Training and Board President of NASCO (North American Students for Cooperation) where he was...
We speak to Ben Gilbarg, Creative Catalyst, Founder, Big Picture Anthems (2016). Gilbarg was at the helm of New Bedford-based non-profit 3rd EyE Unlimited from 1998-2011. “Taking Back the Power: The New Women’s Rights Anthem,” is debuting at Impact HUB Oakland, Friday, March 8, 7:00pm – 10 pm, 2323 Broadway, 510-858-2323. Iva Brito - spoken word artist who finishes the film, also joins us. The premiere of “Taking Back the Power” will headline a night filled with artistic inspiration, valuable discussion, and great music. The launch event will feature performances from some of the anthem’s featured artists: Iva Brito, spoken word poet and talented rapper and Dakota Lopes, both traveling from the east coast (New Bedford, MA). There will be a panel discussion with topics including the role of the arts and how it can help enhance the women’s movement. Panelists include creators of the anthem and film, as well as activists on the front line. The event will be mc’ed by Angel Diaz. Doors open at 7 pm, 7:30 pm panel, 9 p.m. film screening followed by a discussion and music by Dj Anghelli. https://oakland.impacthub.net/things-to-do-in-oakland/ 2. Mama Naomi Washington
Coexist - Dos Trios; Theory - Builders List; Summoning The Assassins - Citazen Pariah, Faded - Emberside, Assimilator - Starfarer, Do Tell - Citazen Pariah; Geeknotes: 07/14 - John Zorn & Bill Laswell @ The Chapel, SF, 07/16 - Pop Gym Free Self-Defense Workshop @ Bluestockings Bookstore, NYC, 07/18 - Bystander Intervention Training @ Impact Hub Oakland, 07/19 - Pollination of Native Plants @ Chicago Cultural Center, 07/20 - Left of the Dial-Antifascist Benefit Show @ The Golden Bull, Oakland; Practice - Baby Cap Bedini; Descending - Dos Trios
Let’s meet this moment and reinvest the gifts of this earth to defend the sacred. This talk was recorded at CoCap 2017 at Impact Hub Oakland, in Oakland California, on October 9-10, 2017. The post It’s Time For A Jubilee – Michelle Long & Don Schaffer appeared first on CoCap Revolution.
This performance was recorded at CoCap 2017 at Impact Hub Oakland, in Oakland California, on October 9-10, 2017. The post Sparlha Swaby (Musical Performance) appeared first on CoCap Revolution.
This Monday on KPFA Radio's Women's Magazine we will hear from a local Queer Feminist anti fascist organizer who will discuss the importance of the antifa and the misogynist aspects of the white supremacist movement. And we will talk to Nonviolent Communication and Buddhist practioner Phoenix Soleil about her upcoming workshop at the Impact Hub Oakland on September 7th from 9 am-1pm on how to have those difficult conversations about Racial Justice in the workplace. The post Queer Feminist Antifa member and Phoenix Soleil on using NVC for talking about racial justice appeared first on KPFA.
Today on KPFA Radio's Women's Magazine we listen to a recent conversation recorded at the Impact Hub Oakland with feminist historian and cultural critic Lata Mani and filmmaker Nicolás Grandi, who are the co-directors of the inspiring new film “The Poetics of Fragility.” Ashara Ekundayo hosts a conversation with the filmmakers and activist and scholar Angela Davis and acclaimed playwright and author Cherrie Moraga who are featured in this new film. They talk about the importance of reclaiming fragility as intrinsic to existence, their own experiences with aging and illness and the importance of embodied knowledge and a connection to the body for healing, politics and physical, spiritual and intellectual transformation. The post Poetics of Fragility film – discussion with Angela Davis, Cherrie Moraga, Lata Mani, Nicolas Grandi appeared first on KPFA.
There is real suffering out there, suffering that is causing violence. What are some of the causes of the suffering and how might we address those? It's a true honor to welcome entrepreneur, creator, and educator Konda Mason to the podcast for an important and timely conversation with Jerry. This discussion was recorded last week, and we thought it was really important to get this out sooner rather than later, particularly given the events in Orlando. Konda and Jerry address some of the source causes of this suffering, this pain, and what opportunities might lie in remembering we’re all in this together. This conversation will challenge you on your privileges and inspire you find new ways of connecting with people from all backgrounds. Links The Whole Person Economy - http://www.thewholepersoneconomy.com/konda-mason/ Konda Mason on Twitter - https://twitter.com/swamikondananda Impact Hub Oakland - https://oakland.impacthub.net Spirit Rock Meditation Center - https://www.spiritrock.org/instructordetails?calendarinstructorid=54375
This is a black arts and culture site. We will be exploring the African Diaspora via the writing, performance, both musical and theatrical (film and stage), as well as the visual arts of Africans in the Diaspora and those influenced by these aesthetic forms of expression. I am interested in the political and social ramifications of art on society, specifically movements supported by these artists and their forebearers. It is my claim that the artists are the true revolutionaries, their work honest and filled with raw unedited passion. They are our true heroes. Ashay! 1. Andrew I. Wilson, multimedia artist, joins us to talk about his new work, The Colored Museum, opens at the Omni Gallery at Impact Hub Oakland. It opens Friday, Dec. 4, 6:30-10 p.m. with an Artist Performance at 8:30 p.m. Visit aiwart.com 2. Nimely V. Napla, master drummer, craftsman, costume designer, choerographer and former director of the Libemian National Cultural Troupe, joins us to talk about Diamano Coura's 40th Anniversary Sekelati (Longevity) at Laney College this weekend, Nov. 28-29. The centerpiece is Napla's The Forbidden Bush part 1. 3. Victoria Theodore in archival interview (4/26/2013) Music SHE Wrote at OPC. Music: V. Theodore's "Grateful," "I'm Your Angel."
The definitions for what social justice means is vast and wide. If one were to research the topic a variety of definitions would be found. What is universal about social justice is that it’s goal is to create institutions where diversity is valued and opportunities for personal development are available. This is certainly what Impact Hub Oakland has created and what our guest Lisa Chacon is committed to. With Akeisha Johnson, life coach and your show host, this episode of Making it Work, we will chat with one of the co-founders of this innovative work space about how she thrives in The Bay while making a difference.
Just last year, San Francisco become the first city in the US to offer sizable tax breaks to property owners who develop urban farms. This measure has been controversial considering the housing concerns in the city. Yet, urban gardens are great for community building. Ashara Ekundayo has made big splashes developing urban gardens as well as developing community artist as the Chief Creative Officer at Impact Hub Oakland. With your host Akeisha Johnson, on this episode of Making It Work Ashara will tell us why she loves calling the Bay home!