WHAT HIP-HOP MEANS TO ME

IBRAHIM ALI-SALAAM

“TAKING, MAKING, MOVING, SHAPING”
WHAT HIP HOP MEANS TO ME

Artist Statement:
“Get your face blown, might face the chrome, we take this more serious than just a poem” (Inspectah Deck on “Play for Keeps”) 

“Heads relax and play the back when I spill, regulate a flow like chicks on birth control pills” (Bahamadia "3 Tha Hard Way")

I always loved that feeling when you hear a dope verse or a line and want to rewind it back a few times. 

"Yo!…What did that MuthaF**** just say?!”
Is what comes out of my mouth when I experience these moments. 

Those lyrics that hit differently than others.

In my paintings it is those moments I am sharing with you.
That’s What Hip-Hop Means To ME!


KICK PUSH

Show Dates: October 13, 2023 - October 29, 2023

Opening Reception: October 13, 2023 6-8/9PM

Gallery Hours: Fridays 6-8PM, Saturdays 12-5PM, Sundays 12-5PM

From the outset of known visual art, humanity has been captivated by the task of representing the body. Though this instinct has been subverted in the last century as art has moved further and further into the realm of the abstract and conceptual, many artists continue to draw on the human form for inspiration. Few contemporary artists, however, have made the figure as focal as Ibrahim Ali-Salaam, whose poignant series of male nudes will be included in Beacon Gallery’s Mixed Messages exhibition, running from July 17th to August 30th. 

Raised in an academically driven family, Ali-Salaam was encouraged to continue his post-secondary education in art school.  Initially unsure of what medium to pursue, he eventually came to concentrate in oil painting and charcoal; mediums that continue to define his work today. Following his graduation from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Ali-Salaam decided to challenge himself and relocated to Cincinnati. 

Throughout his time living away from his hometown, he found himself resolutely drawn to depicting the body. Endlessly fascinated by its complexity and diversity, Ali-Salaam began painting nude self-portraits—first for reasons of accessibility, and later as a practice of introspection. In many of these works, Ali-Salaam’s arms reach out, bracing against invisible confines. At times forceful, at others resigned, these arms relay a keen sense of turmoil and subjugation, representing Ali-Salaam’s lived reality in a culture that tirelessly seeks to classify and categorize his identity.

In Mixed Messages, Ali-Salaam’s paintings work to complicate and counter the assumption that only women experience sexual assaults.  Giving voice to narratives often shut out and forgotten, his works add a vital new dimension to the storied tradition of the male nude.

Ibrahim Ali-Salaam’s oeuvre has been exhibited in galleries across the country and around the Boston area, where he lives and works today. He’s currently adding to an ongoing series of drawings and paintings focusing on disembodied hands in addition to frequent collaborations with his young son. To keep up with Ali-Salaam’s work, you can find him at his website https://ibi5000.wixsite.com/ibrahim or on Instagram @ibi5000.

FUGEES ‘The Score’ Celebrate 25th Anniversary

Fugees Announce International Reunion Tour to Celebrate 25th Anniversary of ‘The Score’

The Fugees shocked the hip-hop world on Tuesday (Sept. 21) with the announcement of an international reunion tour to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their landmark 1996 album The Score. The outing will bring Ms. Lauryn Hill, Wyclef Jean and Pras Michel together for the first time in 15 years for 12 shows presented by Diaspora Calling and produced by Live Nation.

Not wasting any time, the tour kicks off on Wednesday (Sept. 22) with what a release promised will be an intimate show in New York City at an as-yet-undisclosed location. The dates will then pick up with a Nov. 2 gig at the United Center in Chicago, followed by a concert at the Oakland Arena in Oakland, California on Nov. 7, as well as dates in Los Angeles, Atlanta, Miami, Newark, Washington, D.C., Paris, London, Nigeria and Ghana.

The Score, the Fugees’ second and final studio album, hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200 album chart and scored hits with the indelible singles “Killing me Softly,” “Fu-Gee-La” and “Ready or Not”; the collection won the Grammy for best rap album and another for best R&B performance by a duo or group with vocals for “Killing.”

The Fugees have a complex but impactful history. I wasn’t even aware the 25th anniversary had arrived until someone brought it to my attention,” Hill said in a statement of Score, the best-selling album ever by a hip-hop group (at 22 million copies) and, at the time, the first by a rap group to be nominated for an album of the year Grammy. “I decided to honor this significant project, its anniversary, and the fans who appreciated the music by creating a peaceful platform where we could unite,  perform the music we loved, and set an example of reconciliation for the world.”

The group has teamed up with charitable partner Global Citizen for as-yet-unspecified philanthropic initiatives around the tour, with tickets slated to go on sale to the general public beginning Friday (Sept. 24) at 10 a.m. local time here. After splitting in 1998, the Fugees reunited in 2004 for Dave Chappelle’s Block Party concert film, came back together the next year for a 12-minute medley to open the 2005 BET Awards and played their final show in Feb. 2006 at a free gig for fans in Hollywood.

“As I celebrate 25 years with the Fugees, my first memory was that we vowed, from the gate, we would not just do music we would be a movement,” said Wyclef in a statement. “We would be a voice for the un-heard, and in these challenging times, I am grateful once again, that God has brought us together.” by Gil Kaufman

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