Articles by: Tamra Lucid

An interview with Daniel Garber: Air Force Security Officer, bouncer at an infamous punk club, accountant, Rainbow Warrior, alchemist, artist, and Standing Rock Water Protector.
Feminist multimedia artist, singer, and writer Jean Smith – best known as the singer in the iconic underground rock band Mecca Normal – quit her part time job to sell her paintings online. As she shares her latest paintings on Facebook, she allows her fans to follow the rapid evolution of her work. This is the second in a series of interviews with artists working through Facebook to reach audiences.
2017 Wonderland Book Award nominee Jennifer Robin is a treasure of the Portland underground. Her work captures a menagerie of 21st century American characters, many of whom seem archetypal. In this interview, we discuss her books Death Confetti and Earthquakes in Candyland, changing Portland, and Facebook as a platform for artists.
September 17, 2017 marks the 6 year anniversary of Occupy Wall Street. What has become of the occupiers themselves? A good person to ask these questions is Kelly Heresy, the first Occupier to be pepper sprayed.
Southern filmmaker photographer poet Xander Stewart creates art with friends in what up until now has been a fairly private way. Xander will be traveling to Los Angeles soon, not only as a filmmaker screening at Platinum Shorts but also for a group photography exhibit at Lethal Amounts, the prestigious DTLA art gallery.
Danny Goldberg's new book "In Search of the Lost Chord," an antidote to 2017, introduces us to inspiring political and artistic good examples, and bad ones whose mistakes we can learn from, like a guide to people, events and culture worthy of further research.
Daniel Pinchbeck's new book "How Soon Is Now: From Personal Initiation to Global Transformation" is a terrifying yet exhilarating guided tour through what may be the most dangerous case of mass denial in human history.
I'm honored to interview Mamone, a Grammy Award winning audio engineer and producer, and cofounder of Queer Appalachia Collective and the zine Electric Dirt, both dedicated to helping queer folk in Appalachia and the south find their voices, each other, and an audience.
As producer of the documentary End of the Line: The Women of Standing Rock, Pearl Means continues the legacy of her late husband and freedom fighter Russell Means.
An interview with Guy Blakeslee of the psychedelic rock band Entrance on art, spirituality, and musical influences. Blakeslee's new song "Not Gonna Say Your Name" is a beautiful Americana masterwork of a protest song. Watch the music video premiere here.

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