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creative

Black HistoryPoetry

The Creator

by Bahji Steele 12/06/2025
written by Bahji Steele

I never wanted to be an envious person
I never wanted to think I wasn’t content
But I find myself being very critical 
Because that is all I am, a critic
A critic and a consumer

Most of us are not encouraged to create
We are only allowed to consume
And the few of us who do create 
I am told that it only matters if
It’s widely absorbed
can be sold
can trend

Yet in my culture, we are special 
My culture is an export
My culture is commodified  

The most  absorbed music in the world is ours
Our sound is learned and regurgitated back to us and called “pop
Our jokes, our slang learned and traded and abused
Our dances learned 
and relearned 
and taught 
and retaught
Until everyone can move and sound like us 
Even if they don’t know us

Our bodies are glorified for our athleticism
We are a spectacle
Costumed and competing for top spot
Fetishized on courts and stage

We entertain the world
We make the world move, and somehow we can’t afford to dance

Where is the spirit of my ancestors
Who could turn hunger into harmony?
Why haven’t I “broken through”
Why can’t I be an entertainer

Can I create freely as one
But I don’t create to feed the machine
Expression is not my currency 
The richest creators are the most consumed
I create just like I breathe

But the air is dense, and I have asthma 
Where do I find time to create when I can’t access nature
Where do I find space in my soul when it’s aware of its own suppression
Where do I find peace in my mind when I am focused on survival
How do I create with a heavy soul

12/06/2025 0 comments
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Arts & EntertainmentCampusCulture

AAE Hosts Black Horror Art Show

by Omar Abdulkarim 10/28/2018
written by Omar Abdulkarim

The Afrikan Arts Ensemble at UCLA (AAE) coordinated a Black Horror Art Show this past Thursday. The event featured various art forms including photography, drawings, and live performances to name a few.

I was able to sit down with members of AAE’s staff on Saturday to discuss their choice to have a horror exhibit, why they joined AAE, and the importance of AAE and Black art as a whole.

The art exhibit was spearheaded by Lynzie Glover who chose the shows theme after being inspired by Tananarive Due’s ‘Sunken Place’ course. That coupled with the realities of Black people around her, Lynzie wanted to create an exhibit that depicted “the Black experience and how we interpret our trauma.”

Sitting with staff members Ariel Mengistu, Derek Taylor, Jade Box, Lynzie Glover, Princess Amugo, and Viva, it was clear that they all joined AAE for different reasons.

“I felt a missing void artistically as an English major and I found fulfilment in AAE.”

-Princess Amugo

“Coming from Oakland I was surrounded by Black art so AAE felt like home.”

-Viva Allen

“As a freshman I saw them doing cool shit and wanted to be a part of it.”

-Lynzie Glover

“I grew up around white people making art my whole life and wanted to be a part of Black spaces that did the same. So for me beyond the art, it was the space that drew me in to AAE.”

-Ariel Mengistu

The significance of Black art and AAE was unique for everybody yet many of the staff echoed the same sentiments. As everyone spoke of Black art’s importance to them, the room exulted in snaps and synced head nods.

“I’m a design media arts major and there aren’t many Black people in that major but I know Black creators that are artistic so we wanted to make a space where they are welcomed.”

-Jade Box

“Part of why Black art exists is because it has kept us going for so long. We take things that might be looked upon as bad or negative and make art out of them. And that’s why it’s important: it is healing, it is transformational; I don’t know it’s like magic to me.”

-Viva Allen

“No it definitely is! It comes from our own truths and that’s why it’s magic. It can’t be repeated or appropriated no matter how hard you try.”

-Princess Amugo

“Black people are art in every form whether it’s academic or something like dance or music, we just embody art. Regardless if it is painful or traumatic it is necessary to express yourself in any medium.”

-Derek Rooks-Taylor

African Arts Ensemble has been around for decades and was established around the same time as UCLA’s Afrikan Student Union in the 1960’s. The program has undergone restoration the past couple of years as AAE is becoming more active on campus. Follow Afrikan Arts Ensemble on instagram @afrikanartsensemble and stay tuned for announcements on their upcoming general body meeting.

10/28/2018 0 comments
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