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DESCRIPTION:Pro Arts Gallery & Commons is proud to present Landless Not Voiceless, an 
 exhibition curated by the newly found, Oakland-based, Cardboard & Concrete 
 Unhoused Artist Collective.\n\nLandless Not Voiceless will open at Pro Arts 
 Gallery & Commons on Saturday, October 10th, 2020 with public reception, 
 talks, and mural street art action by the Poor People’s 
 campaign.\n\nArtists will begin painting the mural at 11 a.m. The 
 exhibition will feature the works of unhoused artists, members of the 
 Cardboard & Concrete Unhoused Artists Collective — from Oakland and 
 Berkeley, and guest artists, including art installations, paintings, 
 drawings, photography, writing and short films.\n\nThe intention of the 
 Cardboard & Concrete Unhoused Artists Collective is to spotlight the skills 
 and imaginations of displaced communities. Poor and unhoused people are 
 facing evictions and increased criminalization in the midst of a global 
 pandemic, a nationwide housing crisis and looming evictions, which further 
 jeopardize the livelihood, stability, and future of the most vulnerable. We 
 hope our unity, and leadership encourages the People–whether housed or 
 unhoused, facing evictions in the San Francisco Bay Area to stand up, work 
 together and organize.\n\nThis day is also the nine-year anniversary of 
 Occupy Oakland – the militant movement of the 99% vs. the 1% symbolized 
 by a massive tent city on the plaza in front of Oakland City hall. Contrary 
 to popular belief, the political encampment at the plaza was held down and 
 led by the unhoused Black and Brown folks who were already living at the 
 plaza prior to the social justice upheaval. This exhibit will create space 
 for those unhoused militant voices to tell their stories.\n\nA street mural 
 in collaboration with Poor People’s campaign will be painted at the 
 plaza, shedding light on the adversities and intensified criminalization of 
 unhoused residents during a pandemic. Join us for a physically distanced 
 outdoor and indoor event, celebrating the resilience of our unhoused 
 communities. A virtual video tour will also be made available after opening 
 night.\n\nMasks required for attendees. Free food will be provided.\n\nThe 
 Cardboard & Concrete Unhoused Artists Collective is a group of people with 
 like minds that are living in curbside communities, working towards an 
 ultimate goal: Housing is a human right and homelessness is not a crime. We 
 strive for fair treatment for all people. These artists have come together 
 to form a union. A circle with no beginning, no end, no hierarchy. 
 Unbreakable. Undivided. Unafraid.\n\nThe vision of the collective is to 
 inspire the exploration of diverse and complex narratives of our shared 
 humanity through art. Using visual art and dialogue, we want to seed and 
 interpret our societal diseases, encouraging a truthful perspective from 
 the negative stereotypes on unhoused communities. To explore the ways in 
 which we relate to each other and one’s self outside of societal 
 programming and the economic systems that separate us. To stand against the 
 death of humanity.\n\nABOUT THE ARTISTS OF CARDBOARD & CONCRETE 
 COLLECTIVE\n\nTimothy J Petty is a poet, free form dancer, and garden 
 artist focusing on edible landscaping. He is currently based in the Bay 
 area, although a Colorado transplant. He is primarily a peer- taught, 
 having found vibrant inspiration around him most of his life. Tim desires 
 to connect people through common goals. He seeks to dissolve the dishonest 
 systems in society. Tim aims to remind everyone of the Artist 
 inside.\n\nTim feels the strongest urgency relating to the environmental 
 crisis, but having lived a strange and sometimes rough life, he feels at 
 ease when speaking about social justice issues. Through food justice, he 
 believes it is possible to serve both the people and the planet. His 
 ultimate goal as an artist is to transform culture through the integration 
 of ancestral wisdom into our daily lives.\n\nToan Nguyen was born in Biên 
 Hòa, Vietnam and now resides in Berkeley, California. He is an artist that 
 immerses himself in the art he displays and shares. By doing so, he is able 
 to capture the experience and transfer it to the art he creates. His work 
 is at the intersection of art and protest, always engaging with passersby. 
 Toan is interested in creating a discourse that goes beyond the presence of 
 the artist.\n\nHe enjoys cultural diversity and is rarely seen without his 
 extra limb (bicycle).\n\nAnita “Needa Bee” De Asis Miralle wears many 
 hats in Oakland. With Cardboard and Concrete collective, she wears the hat 
 of an educator, activist, visual and spiritual artist. She uses culture and 
 arts to inspire peoples political imaginations, spark critical thought 
 about the world we live in, and offer solutions to the social ills of our 
 society. She is a published writer and a self-published book artist, 
 accomplished thespian, acclaimed spoken word artists and dancer. Miralle 
 practices sacred arts including divination, healing and protection works, 
 and has built community altars in public spaces throughout Oakland from 
 street corners to Oakland Asian Cultural Center Art Gallery.\n\nAs a 
 performer, she has opened for Dead Prez, KRS-1, Michael Franti, Tone Toni 
 Tony, The Roots and Medusa to name a few. In Oakland, she was a member of 
 several multi-disciplinary Hip Hop krus, including Underground Railroad, 
 Overseas Artists, People’s Art and Axe Dance Ensemble.\n\nYesica Prado is 
 a multimedia journalist and a first-generation Mexican immigrant from 
 Nezahualcoyótl, Mexico. She grew up undocumented in a southeast 
 neighborhood in Chicago, Archer Heights. With limited choices for a job 
 without social security, she ventured into photography to learn a skill – 
 a trade. She hoped to earn a living as an independent contractor and 
 attended the University of Illinois at Chicago, earning a BFA in 
 Photography. But unexpectedly before turning 21, she was granted a U-Visa. 
 Yesica took advantage of this new opportunity, expanding her borders to 
 seek a master’s in journalism from the UC Berkeley Graduate School of 
 Journalism.\n\nPrado lost her housing in San Francisco while she was a 
 graduate student. She came to the Berkeley Marina and joined a community of 
 vehicular residents already residing there. They created a network of 
 support for one another, showing the empathy, resilience, and kindness 
 present even in the face of precarious living. Prado captures these 
 elements in her photography in her most recent work, “Driving Home: 
 Surviving the Housing Crisis,” which she completed for visual nonprofit 
 Catchlight as an inaugural CatchLight Local Fellow for the San Francisco 
 Public Press.\n\nAyat Bryant-Jalal was born in San Francisco in 1973, and 
 his parents were Black Panthers. Bryant-Jalal’s family was displaced by 
 the attack on the Black Panther Party and forced to move to S.E. Washington 
 DC. In 1989, he returned to the Bay Area.\n\nIn DC, Ayat was a self-taught 
 artist, drawing portraits (pencil), graffiti on the desks and walls. 
 Through the Arts, Ayat grew and matured in understanding himself and 
 others. He began writing poetry and philosophical sayings – understanding 
 what being Black is. As a painter, Ayat has presented his work at the 
 Impressions Gallery in Berkeley, taking part in a Displaced Artist Venue 
 exhibition. He has been painting and drawing pieces ever since.\n\nTracy 
 Lee is an immigrant from Thailand. She is Iu Mien. A single mother of seven 
 children. Lee and her parents were residents of a refugee camp. In 1983, 
 they came to America. They were brought here by the Americans to have a 
 better life, during a war between the communists in Thailand.\n\nLee’s 
 artwork takes a critical view of social, political and cultural issues. 
 Often referencing police brutality, her work explores the varying 
 relationships between popular culture and fine art. Having engaged subjects 
 as diverse as the civil rights movement, black life matters and modernist 
 architecture, her work reproduces familiar visual and aural signs, 
 arranging them into new conceptually layered installations. She has 
 different ways of expressing her work, but her preferred methods are 
 drawing or green screen movies.\n\nAbout Pro Arts Gallery & COMMONS\n\nPro 
 Arts Gallery & COMMONS is a collectively-held space in Oakland, California 
 that blurs the line between art, debate, experimentation, and 
 collaboration. Through the sharing of material and immaterial resources, we 
 reflect Oakland’s existing artistic and cultural fabric, while creating 
 future landscape of other commons-centric spaces that encourage the 
 economic and cultural power of the community. Our collaborative activities 
 are rooted in these mutual values and principles.\n\nMasks and social 
 distancing will be required.\n\nTo join the opening via Zoom:\nTopic: 
 Landless Not Voiceless Art Opening\n\nJoin Zoom 
 Meeting\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/84093520370\nMeeting ID: 840 9352 
 0370\nOne tap mobile\n+16699009128,,84093520370# US (San 
 Jose)\n+12532158782,,84093520370# US (Tacoma)\nDial by your location\n+1 
 669 900 9128 US (San Jose)\n+1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)\n+1 346 248 7799 US 
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 301 715 8592 US (Germantown)\nMeeting ID: 840 9352 0370\n\nFind your local 
 number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/kcS2RiVQFU\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/10/05/18837321.php
SUMMARY:Landless Not Voiceless an exhibition
LOCATION:Pro Arts Gallery & Commons\n150 Frank H Ogawa Plz / Oscar Grant Plaza, 
 Oakland, CA 94612\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/10/05/18837321.php
DTSTART:20201010T180000Z
DTEND:20201011T020000Z
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