Art as a Vehicle for Change
A Hidden History
(wall mural pasteup in Los Angeles)
All profits from the prints will be donated to:
https://www.blmla.org
BLMLA Arts and Culture recognizes the powerful potential of the Arts as a tool for social and political transformation. Inspired by the Black Arts Movement of the Black Power Era, this collective moves within the tradition of conceptualizing, creating and highlighting artistic works made to contribute to the actualization of a just and liberated world for Black people.
https://www.narf.org
American Indian and Alaska Native individuals, like all people, are entitled to inalienable, fundamental human rights. In addition, tribes have fundamental collective human rights. NARF concentrates on enforcing laws regarding rights to equal protection and to be free from discrimination in voting, education, incarceration, and religion. NARF also helps develop laws that provide unique protections for Native collective rights, traditions, culture, and property such as sacred places, peyote, eagle feathers, burial remains, and funerary objects. NARF’s human rights work includes international forums like the United Nations and the Organization of American States.
Spiritual Awakening
(wall mural pasteup in Los Angeles)
All profits from the prints will be donated to:
https://isha.sadhguru.org
Even though the image depicts Osho, the art symbolizes the inspiration and wisdom any Guru motivates to the minds of those inspired for a spiritual awakening. Sadhguru, another Mystic, has often said that “society is overripe for a spiritual process.” His fundamental vision is to offer the science of inner wellbeing to every human being – a science that helps a person realize the ultimate potential within. From this vision stem a multitude of projects, programs, and methods, all towards the same aim: to raise every human being to the peak of their potential, so that they are exuberant, all-inclusive, and in harmony within themselves and the world.
Homelessness
(wall mural pasteup in London)
All profits from the prints will be donated to:
https://urm.org
Every night, nearly 60,000 Angelenos go to sleep homeless. They are families evicted due to job loss, veterans suffering from trauma, former foster youth, mothers and fathers, daughters and sons. More than 15,000 are chronically homeless, spending months and years on the streets and often suffering from mental illness and physical disabilities. The human and financial costs are tremendous, and the need for safe, affordable housing has never been greater.