In The NewsChronicle's new neighbor: Intersection 5M
May 7, 2010 - Tamara Straus, SF Chronicle
The ground floor of the San Francisco Chronicle building, at 901 Mission St., may seem at first like an odd location for a radical cross-sector collaboration with entrepreneurs and innovators working to create social change. But times are tough for newspapers. The Hearst Corp., which owns The Chron and its 1924 building, is looking for tenants. And the Hub Bay Area, an international social entrepreneurs' collective, and TechShop, a collaborative tech workshop, along with Intersection for the Arts, San Francisco's oldest alternative nonprofit art space, are in need of new digs for joint programs, a satellite gallery, a screening room and an event space
Book Review: Prison/Culture
May 5, 2010 - http://prisonphotography.wordpress.com

Mirrors in Every Corner
March 4, 2010 - Amber Adrian, 7x7 Magazine
A moving debut from a bright young playwright, Mirrors might be the best thing you do this month. Go.
'Mirrors in Every Corner' at the Intersection for the Arts
February 26, 2010 - Emily Wilson, San Francisco Examiner
San José says the play explores what it means to be black, what a family is and what a neighborhood is, in a way that draws the audience in.
"Indictments fall way low on the list of her tactics," he says about Hodge. "I don't know a play I've worked on that has so many question marks in it."

'Mirrors in Every Corner' sheds a new light
February 25, 2010 - Regan McMahon, San Francisco Chronicle
How do we talk about race in contemporary America?
President Obama addressed the question in his historic campaign speech in March 2008. Others, like 25-year-old poet and playwright Chinaka Hodge, do it with their art. Her provocative play "Mirrors in Every Corner," which opens tonight at Intersection for the Arts, explores what happens to an African American family in Oakland after the mother gives birth to a Caucasian baby.

Margaret Harrison @ Intersection for the Arts
February 24, 2010 - TIRZA TRUE LATIMER, squarecylinder.com
Art that engages with the politics of gendered subjectivity frequently references the body. As Margaret Harrison understands fully, there are reasons for the prevalence of this thematic emphasis.
ILL-EVENT: MIRRORS IN EVERY CORNER
February 24, 2010 - ill-literacy.com

Were They "Postracial" Back Then, Too?
February 23, 2010 - Hiya Swanhuyser, Sf Weekly
Joseph directs Hodge's first solo full-length script,Mirrors in Every Corner, which examines what happens when an African-American woman gives birth to a Caucasian baby. Gert
rude Stein would have been there opening night to see the stellar cast Daveed Diggs (Sidney Bechet?), hear the original score by Ambrose Akinmusire (Erik Satie), and admire Evan Bissell's (Georges Braque) set installation.
Oakland Tech Offers Free Community Event for HAMLET: BLOOD IN THE BRAIN, 3/1
February 20, 2010 - Broadway World.com
When California Shakespeare Theater embarked on its New Works/New Communities initiative back in 2004, no one dreamed that the project's first new play, Hamlet: Blood in the Brain-having culminated in Oakland following a sold-out run by Campo Santo at Intersection for the Arts in San Francisco-would someday play on an international stage.
The Bodies Are Back - A Challenge to Cheesecake
February 19, 2010 - Ann Taylor, SF Station
We sometimes have difficulty distinguishing between art and pornography, but throw in some bizarre gender-bending imagery and various plays on the depiction of women in art, pornography, and the media and the problem is infinitely compounded.
This is perhaps why Margaret Harrison's original 1971 exhibition of many of the works in The Bodies Are Back was shut down after one day. These works are - as the name indicates - back, along with newer works on similar themes at Intersection for the Arts.
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