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Black History Month celebrated through variety of Lake County events; ‘An opportunity for people to … celebrate the rich and inspiring history of African Americans'

Black History Month celebrated through variety of Lake County events; ‘An opportunity for people to … celebrate the rich and inspiring history of African Americans'

Chicago Tribune18-02-2025

Celebrations of Black History Month are sprouting throughout Waukegan and Lake County in February showcasing African American culture, and creating a sense of community through the performing arts.
Cory Ratliff, the senior co-pastor at Waukegan's Sign of the Dove Church, emceed a showcase of dance, song, the spoken word and more, at the Waukegan Park District's annual Black History Month Performance.
Long a melting pot of many cultures, Ratliff said sharing the talent of various performers from the Black community not only shows unique elements of its culture, but also brings unity to everyone.
'Bringing all of this together shows the nuances of our history through our performers,' he said. 'We are celebrating Black History Month by showing the resilience of a community from where it came.'
The Park District's celebration of Black History Month through the arts Saturday at the Jack Benny Center in Waukegan was one of the numerous events assembled by individuals and organizations throughout February around Lake County.
Along with the Park District, Waukegan Community Unit School District 60, the African American Museum at England Manor in Waukegan, Brushwood Center in Riverwoods and other organizations are holding Black history events.
'Black History Month is an opportunity for people to gather together and celebrate the rich and inspiring history of African Americans and the remarkable accomplishments that shaped our nation and the world,' museum founder Sylvia England said.
After a dance performance by ALATS Dance Company of Waukegan began the Park District's event, poet Sharon Epps got the crowd going as she talked about a family cornbread recipe. Each time she raised her hand, the crowd responded by shouting, 'Cornbread.'
Leslie Bracero, one of the two operators of Malanated Authors and a writer of illustrated children's books, shared her story growing up with a single mother and grandmother. One thing was stressed.
'My mother said, 'You will go to college, and it will be a Black college,'' she said. 'I graduated from Tuskegee University. I was able to flourish there.'
Before and after the performances, Bracero sat at a table talking about her books and offering them for sale. An educator for more than 30 years, she said her books are meant to let children read stories and see pictures of youngsters who look like them.
'I want children to see themselves in the books,' Bracero said as she sat beside a display with books showing Black and Hispanic youngsters. 'These are mirror or window books where the kids can see themselves.'
The Park District is also hosting a family movie night at 6 p.m. Friday at the Belvidere Recreation Center, Soul Food With Sylvia at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Jane Addams Center in Bowen Park, where England will share some of her recipes, and a concert by the Waukegan Symphony Orchestra at 4 p.m. Sunday at the Brookside campus of Waukegan High School.
Though District 60 focuses on teaching about different cultures throughout the year, Quinn Norman, an instructional coach for the E.P.I.C. Preschool Program, said there is a special focus on Black history in February.
Along with programs in each of the individual schools, Norman said there will be a districtwide celebration focusing on African Americans in Labor at 5:30 p.m. Friday at the high school's Brookside campus.
Norman said the event will showcase people who have made significant contributions to work in America, including entrepreneurs, professionals, members of the military, self-help strategies, gains through organized labor and more. It is part of a national theme this year.
Featuring dance and music performances, speeches by Black community members and exhibits, Norman said the event will include a tribute to Black women who went to work in America's factories as men joined the military to fight in World War II.
Taking her educational efforts beyond the Park District cooking event, England said she has helped arrange Black history displays this month at the Waukegan Public Library, the North Chicago Public Library, the Highwood Public Library and the Woodland Middle School Library in Gurnee.
In addition to arranging displays at the libraries, England is also offering a Black History program at 10 a.m. on Feb. 28 at the James A. Lovell Federal Healthcare Center in North Chicago.
The Brushwood Center in Ryerson Woods held both a culinary event and a Black History Month program on Sunday. The day started with the preparation of soul food which people were able to take into the performance, according to a Brushwood press release.
The Lake County branch of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) held a screening of 'HUSH,' a documentary film on Black mental health Monday at the Genesee Theatre in Waukegan. A panel discussion followed the movie, according to a NAMI press release.

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American Black Film Festival is in Miami. Here are some films to check out
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American Black Film Festival is in Miami. Here are some films to check out

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Black Film Festival spotlights Black storytelling with a made-in-Miami film
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Miami Herald

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Black Film Festival spotlights Black storytelling with a made-in-Miami film

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Is it art, or is it stealing work? Album cover designers stare down an AI future
Is it art, or is it stealing work? Album cover designers stare down an AI future

Hamilton Spectator

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Is it art, or is it stealing work? Album cover designers stare down an AI future

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Fans instantly recognized common flaws of an AI-created image: misspellings in the song's title, sloppy digital fragments. Some demanded she redo the artwork with paid photographers. It took months, but the singer replaced the image with a photograph of herself tied to a chair. She assured fans it was created with an 'incredible team of humans.' 'AI is a Pandora's box that we as a society have collectively opened, and I think it's important that we keep human ramifications in mind as we learn how to use it as a tool and not as a replacement,' she said in an Instagram post in May. Illustrator and musician Keenan Gregory of the band Forester says he used AI technology to extend the background of an old photograph so it could fit on the cover of the band's upcoming EP. The original image for 'Young Guns' was taken in the 1940s as a vertical photograph and showed bass player Dylan Brulotte's grandfather strolling through the streets of Edmonton. Gregory needed a square shape for the album cover, so he put the shot into Photoshop's generative AI tool, which artificially extended the frame's left and right edges with more detail. He removed certain background elements, like storefront signs, with a blend of traditional photo editing techniques. 'Typically, an artist would have to do that manually,' he said. 'But having AI provide you with options, which you then edit, is very powerful.' Gregory said he considers AI one of a photo editor's many tools, adding he didn't use it to make the cover for Royal Tusk's 'Altruistic,' which earlier this year won him a Juno Award for best album artwork. Even when musicians are transparent about using AI, some fans are not ready to embrace it, as British Columbia rock band Unleash the Archers learned last year. Vocalist Brittney Slayes said their concept album 'Phantoma' told the story of an AI gaining sentience and escaping into the real world in the body of an android. 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You know, the usual Twitter uproar, being like scraped across the internet as these terrible people that use AI in their music.' Unleash the Archers responded on their socials, issuing a statement acknowledging they had unintentionally implied their video featured original artwork by Bradshaw when it was actually produced through an AI program without his direct involvement. Their statement recognized how fraught the risks are for bands eager to explore new technology, saying that 'while we were expecting some controversy, we weren't expecting as much as we got.' Slayes said the backlash has forever sullied her connection to the album, which she originally intended as an exploration of an inevitable AI future. Instead, to her, it's become a reminder of how fast-developing AI technology is provoking deep-rooted anxieties. 'People are still afraid of it,' she said. 'And for good reason, because it is taking jobs.' For other artists, she urges them to think carefully about how they introduce AI into their own projects: 'If you're going to use AI for your artwork, you've got to have a really good reason.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 10, 2025.

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