
WTB BUY TICKETS BUTTON GOES HERE
Walk the Block 2024, Photo by Bruce Tom
As we plan our annual creative community building party, we also like to reflect on what we are celebrating.
All year round at Wa Na Wari we…
Hold space in ‘Our Home’ for people to gather freely to commune, learn, think and create together.
Present today’s most exciting Black artists in our city and around the world in our gallery and support the creation of new works as a part of residency program.
Train community members in oral history best practices to better preserve our collective memories through Seattle Black Spatial Histories Institute.
Provide fresh, delicious meals, prepared by Black and Indigenous chefs, to our community, free of charge, through Love Offering.
Organize with Black families to develop new strategies to help them keep their homes and generational assets through CACE 21.
As our programs grow we have the benefit of collaborating with the most incredible artists, thinkers, memory keepers, small businesses, cultural workers, and community organizers.
Walk the Block is a reflection of that creative community building work.
GRATITUDE is the theme for Walk the Block 2025.
We have so much to be grateful for… especially YOU!
When you purchase a ticket for Walk the Block you too become a collaborator in the creative community building work we do year-round.
Get your tickets Today!
WTB BUY TICKETS BUTTON GOES HERE
WALK THE BLOCK INSTITUTE
Bi-Weekly Filmmaker Lecture Series
Virtual on Zoom
August 8th to September 19th, 12pm
Walk the Block Institute invites our community to explore strategies for creative community building. Each year, Walk the Block Institute is presented by a different Wa Na Wari program, reflecting its unique character and focus. This year our art program has curated a group of Black filmmakers to share their work and reflect on their roles as observers, narrators, futurists, and thought provocateurs in social movements.
The Featured Filmmakers are:
Terence Nance
Amir George
Brian McDonald
Gilda Sheppard
-
Terence Etc. (also known as Terence Nance) is an artist born and raised in Dallas, TX. Terence’s work exists on the thresholds between artistic forms, yielding an extensive multidisciplinary practice.
In 2020, Terence released his first EP “Things I Never Had” followed in 2022 by his first album “V O R T E X” (released via Brainfeeder). The music is transcendent, ornate, and playful and tells interdimensional love stories from the early 21st century.
In the world of cinema - Terence has directed music videos for André 3000, Solange and Earl Sweatshirt. He also wrote, directed, scored, and starred in his first feature film “An Oversimplification of Her Beauty” which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival and was released theatrically in 2013. He created two seasons of his Peabody Award-winning HBO series, “Random Acts of Flyness” in 2018 and 2022 the second season was described by The New Yorker as “a work of music-like Afrofuturism, the closest thing I’ve seen to a cinematic reflection of the tones and moods of the music of Sun Ra, complete with the mythopoetic dimension.”
Most recently - Terence completed his first feature length score for Tayarisha Poe’s The Young Wife. He also directed the visual component to André 3000's GRAMMY-nominated album “New Blue Sun”, a 90-minute film that complements the album's themes titled “Listening to the Sun” and opened his first solo exhibition entitled SWARM at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, PA. The exhibition was accompanied by a Live performance of V O R T E X which will be released in January of 2025. Terence is now working on his next album and a yet to be titled feature film.
-
Amir George is a filmmaker and artist whose work blends sound, image, and spirituality into cinematic experiences of non-linear perception. His films explore transformation and transcendence, often following characters who exist outside social conventions, occupying liminal spaces and states of becoming. George's work has screened at institutions and festivals including MOCA Los Angeles, MoMA PS1, the Ann Arbor Film Festival, BlackStar Film Festival, and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. His archival short Shades of Shadows is part of the permanent collection at the Walker Art Center. He is currently developing his debut feature film, The Healer, a narrative rooted in memory, legacy, and reimagined history.
-
Brian McDonald is an award-winning writer/director with over 30 years of experience in film, television, and comic books. A globally respected story consultant and teacher, he has worked with Pixar, Disney, Cirque du Soleil, Lucasfilm, and Jordan Peele's Monkeypaw Productions. His book Invisible Ink is considered essential reading at Pixar and in film programs worldwide. A founding faculty member of the Red Badge Project, McDonald helped veterans with PTSD heal through storytelling. His forthcoming memoir from Macmillan explores the murder of his brother and his personal journey toward forgiveness.
-
Gilda Sheppard, PhD, is an award-winning filmmaker who has screened her documentaries, particularly her documentary Since I Been Down, throughout communities and film festivals in the United States, internationally in Canada, Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tokyo, the Festival Afrique Cannes Film Festival, and in Germany at the International Black Film Festival in Berlin. Sheppard has taught sociology courses and collaborated in the facilitation of workshops on film/production at University of Cape Coast, and Ashesi University in Ghana and at several Washington State women, men and youth prisons. She is a cofounder, former faculty for Freedom Education Project Puget Sound (FEPPS) an organization offering college credit courses at Washington Corrections Center for Women. Sheppard is a 2017 Hedgebrook Fellow for documentary film and a 2019 recipient of an Artist Trust Fellowship. Sheppard is faculty Emerita of Sociology, Cultural and Media Literacy at Evergreen State College in Tacoma.
WALK THE BLOCK ART FESTIVAL
Seattle, Central District, 24th Ave between E. Cherry St. and E. Union St.
September 27th, 1pm-7pm
We are presenting an incredible group of artists this year.
Our headliners are:
Saul Williams meets Carlos Niño & Friends
Curry Hackett
Autumn Breon
-
Saul Williams came to worldwide attention as a writer and performer with his debut film, SLAM (dir. Marc Levin) winning Sundance's Grand Jury Prize and Cannes Camera D'Or in 1998, introducing the world to the phenomenon of slam poetry competitions and Saul as a global ambassador of modern poetry.
As a musician, Saul's albums have featured genre-bending collaborations with producers, such as Rick Rubin and Trent Reznor, that helped usher in Brooklyn's Afro-Punk movement. Saul has also collaborated with “Contemporary Music” composers, writing the libretto for Ted Hearne's LA Philharmonic produced oratorio “PLACE” and two symphonies by the late Swiss composer, Thomas Kessler, based on two books of Saul's poetry, “,said the shotgun to the head.” and “The Dead Emcee Scrolls. Overall, Saul has released six studio albums and five books of poetry, translated into multiple languages.
In 2022, Saul wrote, composed the soundtrack/score, and co-directed the science-fiction musical Neptune Frost, alongside his co-director and creative partner, Anisia Uzeyman. Neptune Frost made its world debut as part of Cannes Film Festival's “Director's Fortnight” and was selected by NYT's film critic A.O. Scott as the #2 film of the year.
As an actor Saul has worked in theater, film and television. He was a series regular on the sitcom “Girlfriends.” He is the first African-American to win Best Actor in Africa's largest film festival FESPACO for his work in the Senegalese film TEY (“Aujourd'hui”) directed by Alain Gomis and his 2020 performance in “Akilla’s Escape” earned him a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Actor.
He was the lead in Broadway's first Hip Hop musical, “Holler If You Hear Me”, based on the lyrics of Tupac Shakur and directed by Kenny Leon. Saul also starred in the two final campaigns of Virgil Abloh for Louis Vuitton, appearing in “Peculiar Contrast, Perfect Light” (F/W 2021) and “Amen Break” (S/S 2022). Most recently, Saul appears as the preacher “Jedidiah Moore” in Ryan Coogler's “Sinners”.
As a performer, Saul has toured in over forty countries, lectured in hundreds of universities, and served as a guest professor of poetry and performance at Stanford University.
Saul holds a BA in Theater and Philosophy from Morehouse College and MFA in Acting from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts.
-
Curry J. Hackett is a transdisciplinary designer, visual artist, and educator exploring Black relationships to land, media, and memory.
A Farmville, Virginia native, his work works across scales and mediums to speculate on the aesthetics and ecologies of the American South. Hackett’s work and ideas have been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Bloomberg, and Metropolis, and exhibited in the Smithsonian Design Triennial, University of Tennessee–Knoxville, and Pratt Institute.
Curry holds architecture degrees from Howard University and the Harvard Graduate School of Design, and most recently taught as Distinguished Lecturer and Professor of Practice at the City College of New York’s Spitzer School of Architecture, contributing to its Place, Memory, and Culture Incubator program.
-
Autumn Breon is a multidisciplinary artist who investigates the visual vocabulary of liberation through a queer Black feminist lens. Using performance, sculpture, and public installation, Breon invites audiences to examine intersectional identities and Diasporic memory. Breon imagines her work as immersive invitations for the public to join in the reimagining and creation of systems that make current oppressive systems obsolete. Breon has created commissions for Art Production Fund, Frieze Art Fair, and the ACLU of Southern California. Breon's performance history includes Hauser & Wirth, the Walt Disney Concert Hall, and the Water Mill Center. She is an alumna of Stanford University where she studied Aeronautics & Astronautics and researched aeronautical astrobiology applications. Breon is a recipient of the Crenshaw Dairy Mart Fellowship for Abolition & the Advancement of the Creative Economy and the Race Forward Fellowship for Housing, Land, and Justice.
Walk the Block 2024 Artists
Check back daily as the list of artists is growing!