FREE SHIPPING ON ALL ORDERS $100+

Author Archives: frank

 

by Frank Bach

Tell us a little bit about yourself – what’s your story?

I am Kamra Sadia Hakim, a Black American transgender artist supported by Munsee Lenape land (Brooklyn). I am the author of Care Manual, musician behind Kamra, and CEO/Founder of Activation Residency. Virgo sun, Leo Rising, Cancer moon, Libra venus meaning, I get beautiful shit done in the deep, and look good while doing it. I was born to two Muslim teenagers in Wahpekute (Minneapolis) metropolis. I have been bold/shy, fake/real, and firm/soft my entire life. I got into the work of caring as a teenager relentlessly devoted to extracurriculars and excellence. I am governed by self respect, loving interrogation, laughing until my guts fall out, and leaving when it is time. My experience on earth is  about the depth of being alive. 

How did Activation Residency come to be?

Activation Residency is one of the first post-festival experiences. I spent my early 20’s deep in the culture of places like FORM Arcosanti, Bonnaroo, and Okeechobee. I was excited by the collective warmth, the relentless hum of live music, and what happens to the energy when we pull back status quo reality and bathe in the fringes of utopian gestures, even if only for a weekend. I was attending these festivals during the heightened rise of social justice activism, made festival organizers make public declarations of solidarity, and began to dream of an intimate space for artists struggling to find a sense of belonging. Activation Residency was born out of a desire to tackle the lack of creative opportunities available to working artists. Artists like Basit, Van Newman, Annika Hansteen-Izora, Julie Byrne, and Qween Jean frequent the residency.  

What led you into the world of wellness?

The desire to be the best lover I can be, acknowledging my disabilities, and discovering I can and do cause harm led me to wellness. As my relationships hardened and chronic pain worsened, I sought out reiki, past life regression, family constellation, massage, akashic records, consent and boundaries education, and codependency recovery. 

I no longer believe that our feelings belong solely to us. We are each other’s business and we ought to cultivate the capacity to be in our feelings together.

You’re based in Brooklyn. Have you always lived there?

I moved to Brooklyn from Shouguang the year Trump got elected. I had previously been working summers in Upstate, NY counseling at Odyssey Teen Camp and felt a connection to the land there. I then got a prestigious fellowship, and chose NYU as my graduate school home. A year into my program, I got a call from the FBI saying my fellowship was being revoked because of past due medical bills, traffic tickets, and psilocybin ingestion. This meant I lost my scholarship, got billed for the scholarship, took out loans to finish my program, and left NYU with a violent amount of student loan debt. 

I feel held by Brooklyn’s culture. Seeing Black people everyday makes me feel safer. I love being trans in New York. I hate street violence, police, social climbing, expensive rent, and sensory overload. I am in the process of transitioning to the Upstate, NY countryside.

What does a typical day look like for you?

My dog and I have our morning walk in the park and then eat breakfast side by side in my small but stylish Brooklyn kitchen. The afternoons are for making, which often ends up looking like me playing and fooling around in the living room. I take an afternoon nap, and then prepare for an evening outing with friends or go on a date. 😉  

What projects or work are you most proud of?

The ‘Hear My No’ official music video gently slaps, and my Deem Journal and Creative Independent interviews feel generative. 

How do you make space for creativity in your work?

I make space for creativity in my work by making all my work creative work. My recording studio is in my living room, so I get to make music whenever inspiration strikes. 

Can you talk about some of the common themes, symbols and meanings found in your work?

Common themes in my work are value-building, care-making, making not creating, play, dreamy pallets, nature, rivers and bodies of water, kingliness, gardens and farms, tenderness, the Universe, fire, earth matter, and language as a tool.

Where do you find inspiration?

I find inspiration in lived experience, which I write about in Care Manual as informing life’s philosophy. Everything we need to navigate the world happens for us. It is about tuning in, brushing off the gems you find, and assigning meaning and value to them based on the kind of life you choose to live. 

How do you balance being an artist and making a living?

I take risks each day to live the life I want backdropped by the fragrance of being an artist and making a living. Requiring larger checks for commissions, securing a fiscal sponsor for Activation Residency, investing in my making, and prioritizing financial literacy are ways I balance art making and paying bills. 

Care Manual by Kamra Sadia Hakim

What’s been your most profound spiritual experience?

Ayahuasca ceremony was a birthing of sorts, and an invitation to process and excavate the generational harm living in my body.

What’s an opinion you used to have that you’ve changed your mind about?

I no longer believe that our feelings belong solely to us. We are each other’s business and we ought to cultivate the capacity to be in our feelings together.

What does the sun represent to you?

The sun represents a symbol of self worth.

If you could change one thing about the world we live in, what would that be?

This question makes me emotional. I would abolition prisons, defund police, and dismantle the money to freedom pipeline. 

Anything you want to promote or plug?

Buy the digital edition of Care Manual.

Leave a comment
 

by Frank Bach
TW // This post has mention of suicide and self-harm

Tell us a little bit about yourself – what’s your story?

My name is Jesiah Atkinson. I was born in Worcester, Massachusetts but I’m based in Virginia. I’ve always been really into things related to how things look. Movie posters, ad campaigns, fashion, reading, music, language, interior design, among a million other things, are all sectors of creative exploration that I’ve always been drawn to.

What led you into the world of art and design?

Art for Kim Petras

I was 19 years old and didn’t know what I should do with my life. The only solid thing I landed on was that I wanted my career to be creative and have the ability to branch off into other creative endeavors seamlessly. I randomly fell upon an app called Adobe Photoshop mix one night and just started remixing photos I’d saved from Tumblr out of pure boredom. I loved how it made me feel. I loved the feeling of endless possibilities. I had enrolled in a local community college for accounting within that time, because, well I had to do something. During my period of suffering at school, I came to realize and accept that school just wasn’t for me and wouldn’t get me to the career and life I’d been fantasizing about for as long as I could remember. So I dropped out and decided graphic design was just going to have to work out.

All of the evil that runs rampant in this world is tied to greed, hatred and a myriad of other unsavory traits. If those things were replaced with love and respect, we’d all be better off.

Have you always lived in Virginia? How do you like it?

I’ve been here for quite some time but I was born in New England (I say New England instead of “Massachusetts” most of the time because it sounds cooler). I’ve been in VA for over a decade now. I plan on leaving as soon as possible.

What does a typical day look like for you?

Sometimes I wake up around 8 or 9 am. Sometimes I wake up around noon. It all depends on how I feel (and the weather). From that point of awakening I do the normal things like brushing my teeth, showering blah blah. Then I go on to satisfy my caffeine addiction with coffee. Black with two sugars and two shots of espresso. From there I open my laptop and get straight to work. I work until the sun goes down, only stopping to drink water or eat something. This isn’t exactly ideal but it works for where I’m at right now. Everything I choose to give my time to regarding work is actively putting me in a better position and setting the stage for my and my families’ future. The way I see it, what better time to work my ass off and grow my network than now when I’m just a 20 something with no kids?

What projects or work are you most proud of?

In no particular order:

  • I designed three shirts for a brand called TWOARABMINDS
  • I designed a cover for Kim Petras (she’s lovely)
  • I designed merch for Megan THEE Stallion (shoutout to Sam Riddle, he’s awesome)
  • I got to help out with laying out Volume 0: Seen by Black Fashion Fair.

Probably one of the most important projects I’ve ever done in my entire life. (shoutout to Antoine Gregory, the boys of the AB+DM studio, Brandon and Nubian for welcoming me so warmly into that extremely impactful project)

TWOARABMINDS

How do you make space for creativity in your work?

Well it all starts at the workspace, and mine is fairly simple. It’s a regular beat up old desk. On it are post it notes, an Aimé Leon Dore lighter, some coasters Vogue sent out to all of their subscribers a few years ago, a plant my job sent me for my birthday and crumbled up pieces of paper containing ideas that I no longer like and to do lists that have been completed. I always make sure to have at least 3 books within arms reach and always have a candle burning. On the creative ideation front, it all begins with me assessing how I feel. What direction do I want to go in? Wondering what the final product could be, and how I want people to feel when they see or hear it. What sector of my frame of reference am I going to pull from? Things like that.

Can you talk about some of the common themes, symbols and meanings found in your work?

Megan Thee Stallion

I think the most common theme in my work is the pull from past eras of design. I can’t help but reference old things. I’m one of those people that likes to dig into the past and see the way things used to be done when it comes to the creative process. I try to emulate that.The quality of a design isn’t, in my opinion, just tied into the obvious. Things like font choice and good composition are no-brainers. For me it’s all about the subtlety. The magic, the feeling, the validity of something lies within the things that aren’t as obvious, because that’s where you, the artist, dwells. That’s what makes your stuff unique and inspiring. That’s the stuff you expound upon and build a name with. Another thing is texture. I love when things look like they’ve lived a life. I like things that look touched. There’s a richness to that.

Where do you find inspiration?

I find inspiration in many things. Films are huge for me. Music, literature, fashion, fine art, architecture, the idiosyncratic tendencies people and characters in films have that makes them an individual. The weather (cloudy, rainy weather to be specific). The tone of voice people use when they speak. Color. Space. Language, food, culture. Relationships. Everything.

How do you balance being an artist and making a living?

I try to merge being an artist and making a living together by way of freelance work. I’m currently working in advertising at an agency but have a plan to go back to freelance full time again. Freelance is where I’m able to make things that I genuinely like and still make money. I’d like to work for a company or brand where my natural inclinations relating to design and aesthetic align with theirs eventually.

What’s been your most profound spiritual experience?

When I was 17, a good friend of mine committed suicide and it changed my life. My mind broke in ways I didn’t know the mind could break. The only avenue I could take to heal enough to where I wouldn’t deteriorate and want to take steps to leave this life myself, was to get very close to God and pray that I made it out of that dark time alive. And I did. The pain of that tragedy, along with other tragedies I’ve experienced, reach far beyond this world. So the healing is only due to my relationship with God. Without that, I simply wouldn’t be here.

What’s an opinion you used to have that you’ve changed your mind about?

When I was a kid, I would hear a lot of the adults around me complain about life. About the “powers that be” and how they crap on everyone. How horrible it is. I thought they were just being dramatic. I know now that they weren’t being dramatic at all, they were right.

What does the sun represent to you?

For me, it represents growth, regeneration. Healing and warmth.

If you could change one thing about the world we live in, what would that be?

If I had it my way, as cheesy as it may sound, I’d inject the basic principle of love and respect into the spirits of everyone. All of the evil that runs rampant in this world is tied to greed, hatred and a myriad of other unsavory traits. If those things were replaced with love and respect, we’d all be better off.

Anything you want to promote or plug?

Here’s my portfolio! And here’s my Twitter and Instagram.

Leave a comment
Updating…
  • No products in the cart.