A drop in the bucket for disadvantaged creators

After flying just once over Mexico City, artist Stephen Wiltshire drew the entire cityscape from memory on a 4-metre (13-foot) canvas. Photograph by Paolo Woods, National Geographic. Wiltshire, a British artist drawing Cityscapes entirely from memory

By Art Noise

      Stephen Wiltshire – The British Artist Drawing City-scapes Entirely from Memory).

In recent times, social commentary and movements are on the tide of the ill advantaged, sparking the conversation of equality and balance, but even in that sphere disabled and dis-advantaged still lack access.

Around 10 million people – roughly 10 percent of the world’s population- live with a disability, around some 56% (almost 4 billion people) do not have access to the internet and Around 1.85 billion people, or 36 percent of the world’s population, lived in extreme poverty. Nearly half the population in developing countries lived on less than $1.25 a day.

In 2019, a video went viral of a 10-year-old school boy doing his assignment at an Apple store with the internet. While that signaled the strength of community, it also started a conversation about equality. https://twitter.com/InactionNever/status/1194462402420584448

Many believing he was already disadvantaged among his peers and a basic amenity like access to internet was setting him back.

This viral video went round at the time when Elizabeth Warren was campaigning for more taxes on the rich, making similar points to the one we are making now about access.

In this conversation some of the most disadvantaged groups in these systems are Black and brown people, lower socio-economic classes and disabled people.

But in today’s world, access goes beyond the internet and in fact the internet has made it possible for otherwise marginalized or micro groups and organizations including ours able to access more people and create waves across the world.

The program offers a platform for creators who cannot afford travel or tuition to improve their skills, reach across the world and also the opportunity to exhibit their art.

With social inclusion and diversity making more waves today, the program hopes to enable more people across race, across ethnicities and across medium to lend access and reach to as many people as we can support in 2020.

Other current social and perhaps health issues behind access includes tightening borders and immigration laws globally, climate change threats and of course the growing threat of the coronavirus which broke out in 2020.

Of course, this gesture remains little more than a drop in the bucket, but as the poem says, little drops of water make a mighty ocean.

About Carma Henry 24635 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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