Memorial to Black Texans to be Unveiled at Capitol
byThe monument to Black Texans will be the last monument to be erected on the Capitol’s South grounds under current law.
The monument to Black Texans will be the last monument to be erected on the Capitol’s South grounds under current law.
Austin’s Hip-hop and R&B infused spoken word competition is in its 11th year.
The film amplifies the impacts of slavery, the emotional scars and twisted beliefs that still reverberate within the nation’s psyche today.
Photographers Moyo Oyelola and Hakeem Adewumi will be featured in the Oct. 10 episode of Arts in Context, a weekly production of KLRU-TV, Austin PBS.
A diverse and enthusiastic crowd of Austinites recently gathered to celebrate 30 years of Brian Joseph, ‘The Bydee Man.’
A seventh-generation Texas Renaissance Woman, Carla has worked as a film/tv/theatrical actor and multi-media artist for over 30 years. As a child, she and her siblings loved to experiment…
Austin is ground zero for a different breed of people. The city births them from its rich soil, people – like Austin-native and blues-rocker Jackie Venson– who ferociously chase down their dreams.
Hello, it’s Maya, and I’m back with another five-star read. The year’s half over, but I still would like to spend today talking about Shonda Rhimes’s “The Year of Yes.”
The Cliff, a gritty new crime drama written and directed by a former Dallas Police Department officer and based on his experiences in Oak Cliff, will show at the Capital City Black Film Festival this week.
The 2016 Capital City Black Film Festival will show “Walk with Me,” a documentary about a charismatic judge who once rubbed elbows with the nation’s civil rights leaders.
Ever since its debut in 2013, the Capital City Black Film Festival has been offering Austinites unique perspectives on film, as well as African American culture.
At last month’s meeting of the new diverseCity Book Club at BookPeople, a Chinese-American man walked in about 10 minutes after the discussion had…