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#Durrett
z3llfipuis4q0r · 1 year
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Daniel Durrett | Caleb Durbin | Jack Thomas | Dylan Clinard | Chandler Proctor
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bttrflyblu · 1 month
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Liz Durrett Wake to Believe
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r3mlato · 7 months
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Nekisha Durett: Frontier
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swanlake1998 · 2 years
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chyrstyn mariah fentroy photographed performing as the title role in dying swan by daniel randall durrett
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skeletonfumes · 1 year
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Southland Tales (2006) Richard Kelly
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Vic Chesnutt - Is The Actor Happy? (1995)
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celebmalenude2 · 1 year
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Timon Kyle Durrett
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evermoredeluxe · 4 months
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Taylor let her curls bejeweled while attending the Chiefs AFC Championship game in Baltimore, MD on January 28, 2024 (via Kara Durrette/Getty Images)
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reasoningdaily · 9 months
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DCist: Art Installation Calls Out Community Erasure, Past And Present
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In what is now known as Metropolitan Park — created in phase one of Amazon’s headquarters in Arlington —  a red brick tower stands resolute, reminding passersby that nearly a century ago a community was erased nearby.
The simple structure, which stands 35 feet tall in an area filled with high-rises and office buildings, seems lost in time. Its red brick exterior evokes a long-past, industrial era — one similar, maybe, to the era  East Arlington residents lived in.
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When visitors step inside the sculpture, they’re greeted by 903 ceramic teardrop-shaped “vessels” — one for every displaced community member.
The space is quiet, intimate and — above all — inspiring. According to Durrett, who spoke in an interview with Street Sense Media, that’s exactly the point.
“I try to leave space for the viewer to experience awe,” Durrett said. “First you see this mundane brick structure that looks like it’s from some bygone period. And then you enter the space and you’re met with something completely unexpected. The viewer then has all of these questions, and then hopefully feels inspired to find the answers and then learn this history that so many people don’t know.”
That history is a tragic one. East Arlington was a victim of displacement long before the 1940s, according to a 2011 presentation by the Arlington Public Library. Many of its residents previously lived in Freedman’s Village, a post-emancipation attempt to house enslaved people, before they were forced out by the government — this time to build the Arlington National Cemetery.
The construction of the Pentagon, at the time the largest office building in the world, initially offered a welcome source of work for men in Queen City, according to Dr. Nancy Perry’s 2014 lecture at the Arlington Historical Society.
East Arlington residents worked on the construction of the Pentagon for months before they were informed that the project would unseat them from their home, Perry said. The Black Heritage Museum of Arlington notes that Queen City was specifically displaced for construction of the transportation corridor that would ferry commuters to the Pentagon.
Without the means to move their belongings, many families were forced to leave behind almost everything they owned, according to the lecture. They fled — first to different temporary housing sites, and then to different parts of the country. Many of them never saw their neighbors again.
It was that side of the tragedy — the human suffering — that the artist said she wanted to evoke. In addition to researching the historic community, Durrett arranged a meeting with one of its last living residents. Her conversation with 92-year-old William Vollin, she said, taught her more about Queen City than archives ever could.
“Being able to identify and speak with someone who has been carrying that history since they were 12 years old further humanized the experiences that those people would have gone through,” Durrett said. “When I was speaking to [Vollin], he didn’t recount losing his home or any material possessions. What he did speak about was the loss of his community. About how he never saw most of those people ever again. He speaks about the destruction of Queen City as though it just happened yesterday.”
But the sculpture is about more than a single community, Durrett said. According to data from the housing search site Apartment List, D.C.’s cost of living is 53% higher than the national average — one of the least affordable cities in the nation.
“Queen City” tells a story of Black displacement at a time when, according to analysis by the Urban Institute, the District’s Black population has been declining for decades. The sculpture, according to Durrett, teaches more than just history.
“The value of learning that history is connecting the dots, it’s seeing how this sort of erasure persists into the present day.”
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To create the 903 teardrops that line the interior of “Queen City,” each representing a displaced resident, Durrett commissioned 17 Black ceramicists from across the country.
“One thing that I asked them,” said Durrett, “was to bring forward stories of a Queen City in their own community. Each and every one of them had one.”
Although the artists might have been aware of each other’s work, this was their first opportunity to work together, Durrett said. Each ceramicist had varying abilities and experience, especially with the teardrop-shaped vessels Durrett was requesting.
This led to a “beautiful thing” happening, Durrett said. The ceramicists, rather than working independently on their portion of the commission, collaborated. Artists with more expertise met with less confident ones, creating an atmosphere of compassion and partnership.
In the process of memorializing a community, Durrett said, they had become one themselves.
“Using community, the very thing that was destroyed when East Arlington was razed, to actually create something as grand and long-lasting as ‘Queen City,’ was beautiful,” Durrett said. “It’s not just about the thing, the object — it’s about the process of making it. It’s about showing what we’re all capable of when we work together.”
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flightypiscean · 1 year
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Someone said Dave East is the sexiest man alive. What!?!?! Don't get me wrong. He's not ugly, but sexiest!?!? I was immediately inspired to create MY list of 100 men who are just as sexy, if not sexier, than Dave East.
21.) Aldis Hodge
22.) Dyllòn Burnside
23.) Jordan Calloway
24.) Russell Hornsby
25.) Timon Kyle Durrett
26.) DeMarco Morgan
27.) Gary Dourdan
28.) Tobias Truvillion
29.) Trai Byers
30.) Tyson Beckford
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maximuswolf · 2 days
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Josh Abbott Band - Texas Red Dirt - Arlington TX 11.8
Josh Abbott Band - Texas Red Dirt - Arlington, TX 11.8 Josh Abbott Band is playing at Texas Live in Arlington on Friday, Nov. 8th! This is a stop on his tour but also a fundraiser for the Do It For Durrett Foundation. VIP tickets are available to meet the band before the show: https://ift.tt/Dvk6r59 around DFW interested in a big event? Submitted June 07, 2024 at 02:07PM by StreetWillingness772 https://ift.tt/1Zkjfzr via /r/Music
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Derek Dunn | Boston Ballet | Photos by Daniel Durrett | @durrett_imagery
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tctmp · 1 month
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Cheaper by the Dozen: Directed by Gail Lerner. With Gabrielle Union, Zach Braff, Erika Christensen, Timon Kyle Durrett. The raucous exploits of a blended family of 12, the Bakers, as they navigate a hectic home life while simultaneously managing their family business.
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karlll69 · 2 months
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swanlake1998 · 2 years
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daniel randall durrett photographed performing as lead neapolitan in swan lake by rosalie o'connor
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