Stuff Rye Is Teaching Me

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You don't need me to tell you #internsrock! This small press for big voices leans heavily on interns and they teach me SO much. What sense does it make to keep all this knowledge in house? None! SO, here I’ll share some morsels from Et Alia’s spring 2021 intern Rye Hazlett. This post will be updated periodically.

Do You Have Permission or Are You Pirating?

Creative Commons Images

Lots of people post images they don't have permissions for. (Copyright of photographs, for example, belong to the photographer.) This theft of intellectual property is not only unethical, but illegal. Many use images they don’t have permission for unknowingly. Who wants to steal the creative stuff that doesn't belong to them?

Here’s what Rye taught me: You can do an "advanced search" on Google images to make sure the images you see are in the creative commons or can be licensed!

Since we just celebrated MLK Day and many people were using images of the great leader himself, I’ll use a search for MLK images as an example.

  1. Go to google.com and click on the “Images” tab. Type in a search for the image you wish to use.

  2. To the right of the Images tab, you’ll see “Settings.” Click it for a drop down menu and go to “Advanced Search.”

Search MLK.JPG

3. When you are on the “Advanced Search” page, scroll to the bottom until you see “Usage Rights” as in the screen shot below. Choose the desired rights for the images you want, and VOILA! You’re in the clear to use what you find for your project or to discover how you can license them (i.e. pay the copyright owner for your commercial use of them, if applicable.)

MLK Search 2.JPG

Opening Day of Crystal C. Mercer's Solo Exhibition THREADING THROUGH

T-H-R-E-A-D-I-N-G-T-H-R-O-U-G-H- Pan African Textiles and the Stories They Tell is a fusion of research, my Southern United States heritage, and my African ...

Congratulations to Crystal C. Mercer on the launch of her first solo exhibition today at University of Central Arkansas! This video is the perfect opportunity to get the insider’s peek at some pages you’ll see in her forthcoming children’s book, From Cotton to Silk: The Magic of Black Hair (forthcoming November 20) and to get to know CC in all her glow. She is hand-stitching every page of this book, pouring 60 hours into every page that will ultimately become not only a testament to the magic of black hair, but nearly 30 individual quilt pieces.

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION:

For My Grandmothers: Tarvell Linda Shears Mercer and Leola Strong Brown

-T-H-R-E-A-D-I-N-G-T-H-R-O-U-G-H- Pan African Textiles and the Stories They Tell is a fusion of research, my Southern United States heritage, and my African lineage that features hand-crafted and hand-embroidered textile renderings that represents my signature artistic aesthetic and my draw to culture, activism, and social justice narratives of class, gender, and color. The visual representation of this work will blend the various fabrics being studied and will combine text and technique to illuminate the messages that cloth communicates. Utilizing fabric as the conduit between the past and the present, this display is paying respect to my own experiences, current and evolving Black culture, and the long spiritual memory of my ancestors.

Take a walk with me on this gallery talk and learn more about each piece in the exhibition!

Open to the public at UCA Downtown, 1105 Oak Street in Conway, Arkansas from August 3rd - 31st. Social distancing and face coverings are required.