RVA’s Seasonal Roundup of Arts and Culture

VMFA, UR and Charlottesville’s Heritage Center host fall, holiday celebrations

Kasseem Dean (Swiss Beatz) and his wife Alicia Keys previewed their “Giants” exhibition at the VMFA.

“Giants: Art from the Dean Collection of Swizz Beats and Alicia Keys” opened at the VMFA on Nov. 22. Coming from the collection of Swizz Beatz, the stage name of American DJ and record producer Kasseem Dean, and Alicia Keys, the exhibition features over 130 works of art by 40 Black artists from Africa, Europe, the United States and the Caribbean.

Among the “giants” celebrated in this collection are both established and emerging artists and photographers – names such as Derrick Adams, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Amy Sherald, Nick Cave, Titus Kaphar, Toyin Ojih Odutola, Esther Mahlangu, Kwame Brathwaite, Mickalene Thomas and Kehinde Wiley.

Two of the featured artists will also participate in events at the VMFA.

Deborah Roberts is a mixed media artist whose work has been exhibited across the U.S. and Europe. On Thursday, Dec. 4, Roberts will give a talk titled “Practice, Practice, Practice” at 6:30 p.m. in the Cheek Theater. Its focus will be the balance of vulnerability, discipline and creative capital – the emotional, physical and imaginative forces – that shape how an artist creates and sustains a creative life.

At 6:30 p.m. the following Thursday, Dec. 11, Arthur Jafa will be in the Cheek Theater for an artist conversation with Enjoli Moon.

Moon, who founded the Afrikana Independent Film Festival in 2014, will speak with Jafa about his use of cinematic qualities in his film and media.

For more than three decades, Jafa has created imagery that looks at how the Black experience is contructed and consumed in contemporary culture. His work includes films, paintings, sculptures and installations – included his time-based media installation which will be on view at the VMFA from Dec. 7-14 as part of the museum’s REWIND<<FastForward series

Both of these artist events will be available to watch from home with Livestream

Check out the events on the calendar at the University of Richmond

UR Free Theater and Dance will present “The Meeting” in the Alice Jepson Theatre. This 1987 American play, written by Jeff Stetson and directed by Chuck Mike, imagines a meeting between Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X in a Harlem hotel during the height of the Civil Rights Movement. An evening performance will take place Saturday, Nov. 22 at 7:30 p.m., with a matinee happening Sunday, Nov. 23 at 2 p.m. Arrive an hour ahead of each performance to view the exhibition and experience the preshow activity in the Modlin Centre lobby and courtyard. 

As part of the Department of Music Free Concert Series, there will be several musical offerings happening in the Camp Concert Hall that are free and open to the public although advance registration is encouraged.

  • Saturday, Nov. 22 at 7:30 p.m.: Wagner and Kong Duo – cellist Christoph Wagner and pianist Joanne Kong will perform the Cello and Piano Sonatas of Frédéric Chopin and Dmitri Shostakovich
  • Sunday, Nov. 23 at 3 p.m.: Global Sounds – a family friendly event featuring student and community performances of traditional Japanese, West African, Brazilian and Indonesian music
  • Monday, Nov. 24 at 7:30 p.m.: Wind Ensemble – featuring classics in the Wind Band Literature, UR’s ensemble will perform a work by Gulda alongside artist-in-residence,  Christoph Wagner
  • Monday, Dec. 1 at 7:30 p.m.: Chamber Ensemble – presenting an evening of music performances by student instrumentalists, vocalists and pianists
  • Wednesday, Dec. 3 at 7:30 p.m.: University Symphony Orchestra – performing a varied program of repertoire that will feature cellist Ethan Rodgers-Gates and clarinetist Adam Kasti, winners of the orchestra’s 2025 Concerto Competition

In addition, the Office of the Chaplaincy and the Department of Music will hold the 52nd annual Candlelight Festival of Lessons and Carols on Sun., Dec. 7, 2025, in the Chapel. Two services will be offered – one at 5 p.m. and one at 8 p.m. The University’s Schola Cantorum will present new and familiar Christmas carols and anthems in the tradition of the “Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols” that was first held at King’s College Chapel in Cambridge, England, on Christmas Eve 1918. The services conclude with the lighting of candles by the congregation and the singing of “Silent Night.” Prelude music will begin 20 minutes before each service. 

Tickets are not required, and seating will be on a first come, first served basis until we reach capacity. Doors will open one hour before each service.

For further details about any of these upcoming events at the Modlin Center for the Arts visit https://modlin.richmond.edu/events/index.html

Celebrate with the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center

The Jefferson School African American Heritage Center will host a special tribute concert honoring the music of Sade on Saturday, Nov. 22. “40 Years of Promise: A Celebration of the Music of Sade” will feature Ivan Orr & Friends performing favorites from Sade’s catalog.

This is a ticketed event with VIP and general admission seating available. The concert begins at 7:30 p.m. Doors open at 6 p.m. for the VIP experience which includes food, drinks and preferred seating. General admission entry begins at 7 p.m. Tickets can be purchased by clicking the link above.

JSAAHC will also host its annual Holiday Celebration on Saturday, Dec. 13 from 1 – 4 p.m.

RSVP at the link above for a free family afternoon featuring holiday music, professional photos with Black Santa and hands-on kids’ crafts, including making Mkeka mats and cookie decorating. Have some hot chocolate and apple cider, or enjoy the bites, beverages, sweet treats and wine tasting hosted by Black Women Who Wine.

Kwanzaa libation begins at 2 p.m., followed by music by the Ebenezer Baptist Church Choir. Professional photos with Black Santa and kids’ crafts will be available throughout the event.

The Jefferson School African American Heritage Center is located at the Jefferson School City Center, 233 4th St. NW, Charlottesville.

Jazz up your weekend with hot sounds and cool vibes

Richmonders and fans from afar can expect a weekend awash in jazz, soul and R&B delivered by a mix of music icons and rising stars when the Richmond Jazz and Music Festival returns to Maymont Park on Aug. 9-10.

Dominion Energy is again the presenting sponsor of the festival which has been bringing big names and newcomers alike to perform in Richmond since its inception in 2010.  This year’s lineup will feature numerous Grammy award-winning and chart-topping artists such as T.I., CeeLo Green, Jodeci, Muni Long, Aloe Blacc, Dru Hill, Masego, Marsha Ambrosius, Hot Like Mars, Norman Brown, Charles Owens, Kirk Walum & Mindi Abair, October London, Raheem DeVaughn, Alexander Mack, and many more.

To mark the official start of the Richmond Jazz and Music Festival, regional jazz artists including D.C. metro area singer/songwriter Kemi Adegoroye will take the stage for “Homegrown at the Hipp” at Jackson Ward’s celebrated Hippodrome Theater on Friday, Aug. 8.

In the lead up, the festival will also host “Straight No Chaser” events at various RVA locations. These downtown jazz performances and jam sessions are free and open to the public.

Aug. 6: Clavin Brown & Sam Reed at Bar Solita; Weldon Hill at Tarrants; Chet Frierson at Black Olive; Charles Owens Trio at the Marriott; Dominion Energy Jazz Café at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.

Aug. 7: John D’earth & Friends at Common House

The festival is rain or shine and attendees are encouraged to bring their own lawn chairs and/or blankets. It should also be noted that transactions at this year’s festival will be cashless. Major credit and debit cards will be accepted with service charges applying to all orders. For more information or tickets visit https://richmondjazzandmusicfestival.com

Celebrate Juneteenth in Hampton

Courtesy: Visit Hampton, Virginia

Juneteenth holds special meaning in Hampton, Virginia. This city is not only where the first Africans in English North America arrived in 1619—it’s also where Fort Monroe earned the nickname “Freedom’s Fortress” during the Civil War because it served as a refuge for thousands of enslaved people fleeing the Confederacy, and where the Emancipation Proclamation was first read in the South, beneath the legendary Emancipation Oak at Hampton University.

With such powerful ties to African American history, Hampton is the perfect place to honor Juneteenth. From engaging museum exhibits to meaningful community events, there are many ways to reflect, celebrate, and learn. Here’s how you can take part in this year’s Juneteenth commemorations in Hampton:

June 14 from 11 AM – 2 PM | 📍 Outlook Beach at Fort Monroe | FREE

Remembrance is a spiritual ceremony honoring the millions of African men, women, and children who perished during the Middle Passage of the Transatlantic Slave Trade.

The day’s events will include an annual Ceremonial Remembrance Walk around the Tree of Remembrance, a procession to the water, poetry, drumming and traditional songs and theatrical performances. At 12:00 noon an International Libation will be orchestrated by Baba Orimalade Ogunjimi of Ile Nago and will occur simultaneously internationally.

A Juneteenth Pageant – The Play

June 14 at 3 & 7:30 PM | 📍 The American Theatre

An Evening of History, Music, Laughter, and Secrets! This moving, often humorous, and memorable experience illuminates the origins and meaning of Juneteenth, the oldest nationally celebrated commemoration of the ending of slavery in the United States. You will laugh and you may cry; most of all you will be enlightened to the true meaning of Juneteenth, also known as ‘Freedom Day!’  

Written and Directed by Marie St. Clair. Presented by the Hampton History Museum Association and Hampton Arts. Tickets are anticipated to sell out.

4th Annual Juneteenth Celebration- Peninsula

June 15 from 11:30 AM – 7 PM | 📍 Mill Point Park in Downtown Hampton | FREE

Celebrate Juneteenth in Hampton with a day of powerful reflection and joyful celebration! This annual event features live music, cultural performances, Black-owned vendors, food trucks, historical presentations, and family-friendly activities — all honoring the legacy of freedom and African American resilience. Don’t miss this vibrant community gathering!

The Soulful Tenors Former member of the Delfonics Joe BranchFormer members of Blue Magic-Fernando “Maurice” Kee and Robert “Buddy” Williamswill be thd Grand Finale!

Also, Phoebus HS basketball star and ” the Voice” contestant who chose John Legend ,Brian Darden II BDii will perform @the 4th Annual Juneteenth Celebration Sunday June 15th @Millpoint park in Hampton.

Juneteenth Beach Party

June 19 from 12-5 PM | 📍 Paradise Ocean Club | FREE

Celebrate culture, community, and summer vibes at this vibrant event hosted by the Virginia Black Film Festival. 

Featuring: Live Performance by 5 Starr; A collective of musicians, Chris Whitaker, Curdarius Swain, Jonathan Frazier, and Robert Wilkins, unite to create an exceptional experience for listeners. One can expect nothing less than a 5-star sound!

Sign the online guest list and receive a free gift at the party!

Road to Freedom Tour at Fort Monroe

June 19 | 📍 Fort Monroe Visitor & Education Center | FREE

Celebrate Juneteenth with a free guided tour on Thursday, June 19, at 1 p.m., 3 p.m., and 5 p.m., leading up to the Juneteenth Concert in Continental Park.

The 45-minute tour begins at the Fort Monroe Visitor & Education Center (30 Ingalls Road), includes indoor and outdoor stops, and highlights the historic journey of freedom seekers. No registration required.

Juneteenth Concert

June 19 from 6 – 8 PM | 📍 Continental Park in Fort Monroe | FREE

Join us for the Juneteenth Concert on Thursday, June 19th, from 6–8 PM at Continental Park in Fort Monroe (4 Fenwick Road, Hampton, VA). Enjoy an evening of live performances, cultural celebration, and community spirit — free admission for all!

Featuring:

  • Violin Performance by Melanie The Violinist
  • Drum & Dance Performance by The Day Program
  • Hip Hop Performance by Night Train357
  • Blues Performance by Bobby Blackhat

The Virginia Black Film Festival

June 20 – 22 | 📍 American Theatre

Celebrate Black stories through film, culture, and community at this multi-day festival in Hampton, VA. Featuring screenings, panels, red carpet events, and live experiences across Fort Monroe and Hampton University, the festival draws creatives, film lovers, and families alike.

Film Screenings – see a list of films here. For film schedule, go to VirginiaBlackFilmFestival.com/tickets and scroll all the way down. Click the white button that says “Screening Schedule.” Tickets are sold by Screening Block #s. Screening Blocks 1-4 are held at the American Theatre. Screening Blocks 5-10 will be at Ogden Hall at Hampton University. Weekend & Day Passes are also available.

Sessions by accomplished guest Speakers sold separately. See Tickets page for more info.

Hampton Roads Black Business Expo

June 21 & 22 | 📍 American Theatre | FREE

The Hampton Roads Black Business Expo is one component of the Virginia Black Film Festival. This entire event will be the place to celebrate Juneteenth in Hampton Roads and Buy Black, by supporting Black Businesses and Black Filmmakers!

The Black Business Expo will take place Saturday and Sunday (June 21-22nd) inside the American Theatre 125 E. Mellen Street, Hampton, VA 23663, co-located with the movie screenings and panels of the film festival.


Plan Your Trip: Juneteenth Trip Itinerary 2025

Jump to: June 14 | June 15 | June 16 – 18 | June 19 | June 20 | June 21 | June 22

Tip: Get the Hampton Black History Sites Pass. Access is free & the link is texted to your phone. In the below itinerary, the 📲 icon notes locations you can check-into on your pass!

Saturday, June 14

11 AM: Sankofa’s 14th Annual Remembrance Ceremony

Attire: White or Traditional African garb. Beach-appropriate shoes. What to Bring: Fresh flowers for the Ancestral Offering. Beach chairs, blankets, and other beach paraphernalia. Bring your DRUMS and other music makers to celebrate these Ancestors and this culture!

Lunch: After the ceremony, grab lunch nearby at Firehouse Coffee 1881, Paradise Ocean Club, or The Deadrise – all of which have outdoor seating!

Daytime: Then, make your way to the Fort Monroe Visitor & Education Center 📲 and enjoy the AC as you browse the history exhibits. Before leaving, ask the staff about free tickets to the Casemate Museum and/or directions to the First Africans in Virginia Marker 📲.

Enjoy roaming around Fort Monroe – a popular area for casual exploring. History lovers might pack your headphones and listen to the cell phone tour as you venture, or you might just enjoy the view as you walk along the Seawall Trail. If you packed your beach gear, you might prefer return to Outlook Beach for some sunny rest & relaxation.

Dinner: Grab dinner at a Black-Owned restaurant or your fave vacation spot.

3 or 7:30 PM: A Juneteenth Pageant – The Play (Reminder: tickets are expected to sell out in advance!)

Sunday, June 15

11:30 AM – 7 PM: 4th Annual Juneteenth Celebration- Peninsula

Lunch & Dinner: Don’t miss out on the all-day live entertainment at the celebration with tasty options from the food trucks that will be nearby or choose from one of the restaurants in Downtown Hampton.

Daytime: Take a break from the festivities and check the Hampton History Museum 📲 off your list. Located just a few blocks away from Mill Point Park, the exhibits here showcase the important contributions of African Americans to Hampton’s history.

June 16 – 18

Plan your day around the sites on the Hampton Black History Sites Pass that aren’t adjacent to the Juneteenth events:

Or by area:

Thursday, June 19

Breakfast: Sleep in & enjoy a leisurely breakfast as before a day jam-packed with fun & celebration. Enjoy relaxing waterfront views at Copper Barley inside The Landing Hotel, savor beignets from Mango Mangeaux at Simply Panache Place, or stay at the Black-Owned Magnolia House Inn, a charming bed & breakfast.

Lunch: Paradise Ocean Club

12 – 5 PM: Juneteenth Beach Party at Paradise Ocean Club

Bring Your Own… nothing, really. Paradise Ocean Club is a one-stop relaxation & event destination offering a private beach, tiki bar, full-service restaurant, & more!

1, 3, or 5 PM: Road to Freedom Tour at Fort Monroe

6-8 PM: Juneteenth Concert at Continental Park in Fort Monroe

Bring your own chairs or blankets to sit on and enjoy an evening of live performances, cultural celebration, and community spirit by the scenic Chesapeake Bay.

Dinner: The Deadrise restaurant in Fort Monroe closes at 9 PM or you can plan to try a new place in Phoebus, which is just across the bridge as you’re leaving.

Friday, June 20

10 AM – 10 PM: Virginia Black Film Festival at Ogden Hall, Hampton University

Check the schedule to see which films/screening blocks or speakers you want to plan your day around. Note: When visiting Hampton University, you’ll need to drive through the main gate to obtain a visitors parking pass.

Lunch: To stay on campus, you can eat at the dining hall – an impressive two-story atrium along the waterfront – or take a quick drive to nearby Palm Tree Caribbean for authentic Caribbean & Western food. Next door there’s also Palm Tree Vegan & Juice Bar with delicious plant-based meals even non-vegans enjoy.

Daytime ideas on the Hampton University campus:

black mother and son read history sign at emancipation oak at hampton university
  • Take a break & stretch your legs with a walk over to the Hampton University Museum (open weekdays 8 AM – 5 PM). Step inside the oldest African American museum in the U.S. and explore one of the most impressive multicultural art collections in America!
  • Visit the Emancipation Oak 📲 – the site of the first public Southern reading of President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation. With limbs sprawling over a hundred feet in diameter, the Emancipation oak is designated as one of the 10 Great Trees of the World by the National Geographic Society.
  • Bring your headphones & listen to the Cell Phone Tour for Hampton University, one of the country’s most prestigious HBCUs. The tour starts at the Armstrong Lincoln Memorial, but since it loops, you can jump to which ever stop is nearby – including the Hampton University Museum or Emancipation Oak.

Dinner: Dine where the locals do at nearby favorites like STUFT (Mexican-inspired street food), Skrimp Shack, or Mama Rosa’s Italian Family Restaurant.

8 PM: That 90’s Rave – Hear the biggest tracks of the 90s plus remixes from the pre Y2K era at The Vanguard Brewpub & Distillery. Tickets

Saturday, June 21

10 AM – 5 PM: Virginia Black Film Festival & Hampton Roads Black Business Expo

Check the schedule to see which films/screening blocks or speakers you want to plan your day around. In between showings, visit the Black Business Expo being held in conjunction with the film festival.

Note: If attending at Hampton University, you’ll need to drive through the main gate to obtain a visitors parking pass.

Lunch

  • if at Hampton University you might take the opportunity to eat at the campus dining hall – an impressive two-story atrium along the waterfront.
  • if at The American Theatre in Phoebus there are several options within walking distance. Fuller’s Raw Bar is a must for oyster lovers or Black-Owned Native Soul Bar offers vegan meals to-go

5-8 PM: Block Party Unplugged

Head to Downtown Hampton, where a section of Queens Way serves as an outdoor ‘streatery’ for several nearby restaurants. Today happens to overlap with Block Party Unplugged, so come sip, sway, & stay awhile under the summer sky!

Dinner: Downtown

Sunday, June 22

10 AM – 4:30 PM: Virginia Black Film Festival & Hampton Roads Black Business Expo

Check the schedule to see which films/screening blocks or speakers you want to plan your day around. In between showings, visit the Black Business Expo being held in conjunction with the film festival.

Lunch: You won’t want to miss brunch at Mango Manguaux in Phoebus, whose menu features French, Creole and Neo-Soul cuisine.

In era of chaos, ‘Boots on the Ground’ dance brings escape with a beat

By Bonnie Newman Davis

NABJ Black News & Views

Posted April 3, 2025


RICHMOND — Minutes before Kendrick Lamar’s halftime performance at February’s Super Bowl LXI game, several people gave an impromptu dance show of their own at a suburban home near Richmond, Virginia. 

Onlookers were surprised when the dancers of various ages did not perform the Cha Cha Slide, Cupid Shuffle or the Wobble — popular line dances that have prevailed at many Black social gatherings for the past three decades or more.

Instead, the dancers, holding colorful hand fans, debuted a new line dance to “Boots on the Ground (Where Them Fans At),” a gritty Southern song with a catchy beat. The fans’ rhythmic “clack, clack, clack” after each break or dance sequence produced squeals of joy from everyone in the room.

Thanks to social media, the song and dance with a “wrist” have gone viral. Both have been played and performed nonstop since the song dropped in December 2024. Artist 803Fresh, aka Douglas Furtick, of Wagener, South Carolina, wrote and recorded the song. Jaterrious Trésean Little, aka Trè Little of Newnan, Georgia, is credited with creating the dance steps for the tune.

While still trying to process the wide support he’s attracted for “Boots on the Ground,” 803Fresh believes that its popularity is based on the song’s relatability factor.

The artist told WIS 10 (Columbia, S.C.) reporter Billie Jean Shaw last month that he wrote and recorded the song after attending a “trail ride,” a country party with Black culture influences. Trail rides can feature a horseback procession, zydeco, Southern soul, or hip-hop fusion music, along with dancing and feasting, according to various online sources. Attendees can number in the thousands, with many returning to the South for the gatherings from cities across the country, noted a “Black Women on Reddit” post.

Kemel Patton, Richmond's "Line Dance King," teaches the "Boots on the Ground" dance at the Pine Camp Arts and Community Center. Photo credit: Bonnie Newman Davis, NABJ Black News & Views
Kemel Patton, Richmond’s “Line Dance King,” teaches the “Boots on the Ground” dance at the Pine Camp Arts and Community Center. Photo credit: Bonnie Newman Davis, NABJ Black News & Views

During his first trail ride, 803Fresh noticed that many attendees toted hand fans, but the fans were absent on his second trail ride. His observation led to “Boots on the Ground” and its subtitle, “Where Them Fans At.”

After listening to the song with the lyrics, it will probably come as no surprise that 803Fresh grew up hearing a combination of Southern soul and country often filled with bass guitar, drums, blues, and gospel.

“Get up by your seat (your seat), let your body move (move)

Cowboys and cowgirls are feeling that groove (feeling that groove)

Sippin’ on moonshine, fire barrel rollin’ (rollin’)

I’ma get behind that thing, girl, and hold it, hold, it, hold it, hold it

In addition to performing in the church, he enjoyed listening to blues and soul singers such as James Brown, Marvin Sease, Tyrone Davis, and Z.Z. Hill. 

“It’s a beautiful marriage,” he said of his sounds and those of soul singers who dominated the charts from the 1960s until the mid-1970s. “I do my two steps and I’m done. It’s good times, fans, a lot of boots wearing and engaging with the crowd.”

Birth of a trend

Not long after hearing the song for the first time, Trè Little, 22, took the tune to another level, going beyond 803Fresh’s two steps to create a line dance for the song. 

Trè Little created the “Boots on the Ground” line dance.

But the dance actually came by accident when Little, a dancer all his life, tripped over his feet on one of the turns, he said during a recent telephone interview.

 “After I tripped over my feet, it was like that part had to go with the song,” Little recalled. “So I had to add that front step and turn into it. And that was really then I just started, like, just going with the flow. Everything just came together like a puzzle, basically.”

After Little recorded himself dancing to the song and posting it to social media, it generated 100,000 views overnight, he said. “Oh, my goodness! Yes!  And then it just blew up from there.”

Once Little posted online tutorials demonstrating the dance, others in the line dance community joined in. He has since met 803Fresh and they plan to collaborate on more music and dance steps, he said.

“We talk here and there and whenever he has a band in Atlanta or somewhere in this area he calls and we get together,” Little said.

Kemel Patton, Richmond’s “Line Dance King,” with two of his “Boots on the Ground” students at the Pine Camp Arts and Community Center. Photo credit: Bonnie Newman Davis, NABJ Black News & Views

One community’s love affair with ‘Boots on the Ground’

Meanwhile, back in Richmond, a city that produced musical legends such as Jerome Brailey, D’Angelo, Stu Gardner, Mable Scott, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, and Lonnie Liston Smith, fans continue to boogie to “Boots on the Ground.”

Options to feed their dance hunger appear unlimited because community centers, churches, restaurants, and other facilities routinely host line-dance classes or events throughout the city.

On a recent sunny Saturday, Christopher Woody, who once performed with the UniverSoul Circus, led his first line-dance event at the Satellite Club on Richmond’s Southside. The 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. event, organized just two weeks in advance, drew nearly 100 people. Many of the partiers who learned about the gathering on social media were Black women, dressed in Western wear and armed with colorful folding hand fans. (Fans range in cost, from $2.99 on Temu to $8.99 and up on Amazon.)

Woody, 40, a mental health technician, has been line dancing for 10 years. He decided to teach the dance at the suggestion of a friend.

Christopher Woody with a line dance ethusiast. Photo credit: Bonnie Newman Davis, NABJ Black News & Views

Teaching is different because everything’s at a faster pace when dancing, he said. “So, when you’re teaching, you have to slow it all the way down. Everything is step by step.”

Woody believes that part of the reason the line dance went viral so quickly is the current U.S. political stage, where uncertainty reigns.

“I think in a time like this, people want to get together and have, like, you know how the old cookout used to be?” he said.  When you had people that got together to simply enjoy themselves, set aside their concerns for a while.”

Kemel Patton, affectionately known as the “Line Dance King” in Richmond, agrees. Patton, 63, a line dance instructor for three decades, has relied on dance to help minimize his battle with multiple sclerosis, a chronic, autoimmune disease that affects the central nervous system.

Through the years, Patton has seen as many as 350 people show up for his classes at various venues—from vacant food courts at dying malls to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts’ marbled halls, as well as the Black History Museum and Cultural Center of Virginia.

Given his longevity in the line dance community, Patton sees the “Boots on the Ground” phenomenon as more than a “great hip-hop vibe with a country feel.”

Rather it also is “a song and dance that let’s folks know that our culture goes beyond just one type of music,” he said, adding, “that the root of all music started with us.”

Building on a dream: The Obama Presidential Center

By Bonnnie Newman Davis

What an honor for my BND Institute of Media and Culture Inc. to be a Community Partner with VCU Libraries last evening where Dr. Crystal M. Moten spoke about the forthcoming Obama Presidential Center! Dr. Moten, the Center’s Curator of Collection and Exhibitions, walked us through the facility set to open next year. “Building a Home for Change: The Obama Presidential Center,” was last night’s theme. Dr. Moten explained how the center is rooted in a larger, complex discussion about democracy, and the historical predecessors who made President and Mrs. Obama’s stories possible. She also shared the center’s storytelling goals as they relate to the events, policies, challenges and accomplishments of the Obama Presidency. Other aspects of the center, to be housed on the windy city’s south side, will include a basketball court/athletic facility, a community fruit and veggie garden, and a BRANCH OF THE CHICAGO PUBLIC LIBRARY!! How cool is that? We had a lovely time and I thank Dr. Irene M.H. Herold, Sue Robinson, Dr. Carmen Foster, Antonia Vassar and the super staff at VCU Libraries for making this event so special for me, several of my dear friends and for my daughter, Erin Stanley, who earned her master’s degree in social work from the University of Chicago. I told Dr. Moten that Michelle Obama and Valerie Jarrett probably were instrumental in making sure that students such as my Erin were able to further their education at UofC. I can’t wait to attend next year’s Obama Presidential Center opening!! Go online and read more about this monumental project that will honor America’s first Black president!

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