Contribution to the art of black people Contribution to the art of black American Americans ".................................................... Richard Wright is his autobiographical black boy these words He and the other many black Americans showed a generous talent in art.In fact, the black people have given talent to art for a long time, especially in the fields of painting, literature and music .
Of course there are other things to do to restore the background and significance of black women 's contribution to black students, the power of the black people, and the black art movement, and especially of the work of Webster. When black women 's contribution is ambiguous, discussing the stage or dimensions of a black woman seems easier, as they are unique and often contradictory. But to revive women like Webster Fabio to a historical story is to follow the lines connecting these moves - their leadership, institutional houses, and ideological foundations. To explain the silence that made Webster Fabio and other people's inconspicuous existence is to reveal obstacles and sacrifices that hurt revolutionary organizations. Fixing these gaps is the source of the force needed to restore and update our future for a more just and more legitimate future.
Beginning in the mid-1960's and early 1970's, Sarah Webster Fabio was a black student in the San Francisco Bay Area, the center of Black Power and Black Art movement, but she was a scholar, educator, poet and performer. Activists' work is hardly known today. Since 1966, she was regularly published in Black Digest / Black World; that year, she also attended the first Black Art Festival and traveled to join the Duke of Ellington, Langston Hughes, Ami Did. Ribaraka (then Le Rio Jones) and other artists. She wrote literary critiques and theories published in anthology, edited the journal, and produced some of her own theater and poetry. Between 1972 and 1976, she recorded four poems and a music album with her band "Do Fight the Feling". In addition to writing and acting, Webster Fabio taught several initial courses at the Merritt (primary at the time) college and taught early courses at the University of California at Berkeley's Black faculty.