#blackurbanities — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #blackurbanities, aggregated by home.social.
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#podcast 📻 Through Mpho Matsipa's inquiry and practice, art and curatorial work become tools for accessing the city (and its uses) differently. By attending to ubiquitous yet often undervalued spaces, such as the hair salon, as sites of survival and imagination in environments where one is not always welcome, she reveals how these spaces disrupt binaries such as center/periphery or formal/informal.
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#podcast 📻 Through Mpho Matsipa's inquiry and practice, art and curatorial work become tools for accessing the city (and its uses) differently. By attending to ubiquitous yet often undervalued spaces, such as the hair salon, as sites of survival and imagination in environments where one is not always welcome, she reveals how these spaces disrupt binaries such as center/periphery or formal/informal.
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#podcast 📻 Through Mpho Matsipa's inquiry and practice, art and curatorial work become tools for accessing the city (and its uses) differently. By attending to ubiquitous yet often undervalued spaces, such as the hair salon, as sites of survival and imagination in environments where one is not always welcome, she reveals how these spaces disrupt binaries such as center/periphery or formal/informal.
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#podcast 📻 Through Mpho Matsipa's inquiry and practice, art and curatorial work become tools for accessing the city (and its uses) differently. By attending to ubiquitous yet often undervalued spaces, such as the hair salon, as sites of survival and imagination in environments where one is not always welcome, she reveals how these spaces disrupt binaries such as center/periphery or formal/informal.
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#podcast 📻 Through Mpho Matsipa's inquiry and practice, art and curatorial work become tools for accessing the city (and its uses) differently. By attending to ubiquitous yet often undervalued spaces, such as the hair salon, as sites of survival and imagination in environments where one is not always welcome, she reveals how these spaces disrupt binaries such as center/periphery or formal/informal.