A new comprehensive version expressive to ideals that have improved and identify both accuracy and impressions of black women today, versalitily moral dignity of the usesage of women rights to societies of our shared natural importance, as associates of service, as women, The 70's during the black movement (Created By, Ms. Lisa C.Jackson)
Thursday, February 14, 2013
First Lady Michelle Obama Valentine's Day 2011 Interview
A RE-CREATION , and ILLUSTRATION /////Posted by Lisa C. Jackson
Friday, February 8, 2013
The Soul Children - Long Ride Home "www.getbluesinfo.com"
Illustration and creation by ms. Lisa C. Jackson
Monday, February 4, 2013
Friday, February 1, 2013
Please, Please, Please & James Brown Jam (Live at Chastai...
Illustration and creation by ms. Lisa C. Jackson
after the watts riots 1967
1967 AFTER THE WATTS RIOTS
I was 4 a kindergardner : mostly blacks and negro women who had to work and feed there families
at home a home in the watts area became ghetto's
the stench of trash , alley way full of riot burned objects , it rain it seem like every day
the rain put out a lot of fires, store remained closed, due to broken windows , broken locks and very un-safe store mostly teens , would dig for many things that was trashed and damage, shoes , jeans, open hair parlors,
for sales and had taken dress racks to the streets to sale , buy this dress today for $2.00, my mom said those where the good day's we would go shopping in parking lots in black area, early on saturday mornings sometimes i would see so much stuff it was everywhere, may i stay in the car , she said you will miss all this good stuff,
while every store in watts went out of business
most black family would sell the merchandise
themselves at home , on sidewalks, inside of there
................................
homes bedrooms full of clothes, the porch had clothes on hangers, damage and still with tags,
burned, how do you get smoke out of clothes...
.................................
Illustration and creation by ms. Lisa C. Jackson
I was 4 a kindergardner : mostly blacks and negro women who had to work and feed there families
at home a home in the watts area became ghetto's
the stench of trash , alley way full of riot burned objects , it rain it seem like every day
the rain put out a lot of fires, store remained closed, due to broken windows , broken locks and very un-safe store mostly teens , would dig for many things that was trashed and damage, shoes , jeans, open hair parlors,
for sales and had taken dress racks to the streets to sale , buy this dress today for $2.00, my mom said those where the good day's we would go shopping in parking lots in black area, early on saturday mornings sometimes i would see so much stuff it was everywhere, may i stay in the car , she said you will miss all this good stuff,
while every store in watts went out of business
most black family would sell the merchandise
themselves at home , on sidewalks, inside of there
................................
homes bedrooms full of clothes, the porch had clothes on hangers, damage and still with tags,
burned, how do you get smoke out of clothes...
.................................
Illustration and creation by ms. Lisa C. Jackson
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., stands outside the Southern Christian Leadership Conference offices in Atlanta, GA, in November 1967. The photograph was taken by renowned Leica Camera photographer, Benedict J. Fernandez. Leica Camera, Inc., is currently supporting Countdown To Eternity, a national photo exhibition providing an inspirational view of the famed civil rights leader through the photographs of Fernandez. (PRNewsFoto) Original Filename: LEICA_CAMERA___DR._MARTIN_LUTHER_KING_JR._PRN4.jpg
Watts, 1965The latent anger seething beneath the surface of America's inner cities boiled over repeatedly in the mid-1960s. In Los Angeles, after a California Highway Patrolmen refused to allow the brother of a man arrested for drunken driving to take the vehicle home, a crowd gathered and quickly morphed into a violent mob. By the time the rioting was over six days later, 34 people had been killed, 1,032 injured, and 3,952 arrested. Strikingly similar events took place in Detroit and Newark in 1967.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)