Established at Mocha Lounge in Washington, DC in 2004, The Front Porch is a feature performance-art series curated by poet and Hip-Hop artist Tim’m West that has followed him to Atlanta, Oakland, Chicago, Houston, New York City, Cincinnati, and an array of colleges and universities across the country. Tim’m wanted to recreate the feeling of inclusion and safety he felt on his maternal grandparents' front porch in Arkansas and enable people from diverse backgrounds to speak truth to power. The Front Porch is intended to be an intimate setting where the audience actively engages with the performer, creatively reaffirming Bayard Rustin's vision of the “oneness of the human family.”
aGENDA
5:30pm – 6:00pm: Doors open
6:00 pm – 6:30 pm: + Community Time + Black History Haikus
Come build community with people you know and make new friends before our 6:30 start. Meet author L. Lamar Wilson and other special guests, while we participate in a fun game of Black History Love Haikus, where people will partner with someone new, discuss inspirational facts of Black History, and co-create a Haiku that will be shared at some point during the program.
6:00 - 6:10: Tim’m WEst Welcomes Everyone to Front Porch
The Front Porch was created by Tim’m West, who is Executive Director of the LGBTQ+ Institute at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights in December 2004 to invite a more inclusive, LGBTQ+ friendly space for poets, musicians, and storytellers of all backgrounds to come together to celebrate unity, hope, and justice. In December 2024, Tim’m rekindled The Front Porch, which was once a residency at House of IntegriTEA in Virginia Highlands back in 2007 and 2008. It’s back y’all.
Click the flyer to see original promo for the Front Porch from 2004.
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Tim'm T. West (he/they) is a poet, scholar, rapper, and youth activist who was born in Cincinnati and raised primarily in rural Arkansas. A contemporary Renaissance man, he is a featured voice in multiple documentaries about hip hop and masculinity because of his groundbreaking work as a gay-identified hip hop artist, AIDS activist, and youth advocate, among other affiliations.
A teacher and cultural producer at a number of secondary and post-secondary institutions, as well as a former varsity basketball coach, Tim’m has a B.A. from Duke University and graduate degrees from The New School for Social Research and Stanford University.
They are the author of several books (Red Dirt Revival: a poetic memoir in 6 Breaths, BARE: notes from a porchdweller, Flirting, and pre|dispositions). As a writer, Tim’m is widely anthologized and published. As a recording artist, they have produced and released nine hip hop albums, the first several with iconic queer rap group D/DC.
After serving for 8.5 years as Senior Managing Director of Teach for America’s National Prism Alliances (LGBTQ+ Initiative), Tim’m became Executive Director of the LGBTQ+ Institute at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights.
6:40 PM - 7:20 PM: Open Mic performances by special guests
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Treasure Von-Holland (she/they) is a junior at Southwest DeKalb High School in DeKalb County, Georgia. She has aspirations to attend Duke University and desires to study genetics and psychology. Additionally, she is a poet, and among competing starters for her school's literary team, specifically in argumentative essay writing. They volunteer over the summer through a program called Los Niños Primero, which helps Spanish-speaking kids get ahead in elementary education. She is also on the Youth Advisory Board for the LGBTQ Institute’s YOU(th) Belong program at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights.
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Aafroqween (Fisiwe Zwana Freeman) is a poet, spoken word artist, vocalist, and published author of a collection of poems entitled “lovewords: poetry from a place called love”. She is the Founder and first Host of “The Sugar Shack Café Open Mic Showcase” in Harlem NY. Later she became a host for “Hottest Poets Open Mic” at Mocha Lounge, also in Harlem. As a member of the woman- centered, Spoken Word, Song and Dance Trio Precious Gift Aafroqween has performed from New York City to Canada. In 2000 Precious Gift (Tantra Zawadi, Iyapiphany and Fisiwe) released their spoken word cd "Selling My Diamonds" at Danny Simmons’ Corridor Gallery in Brooklyn NY. In 2005, Tantra Zawadi and Fisiwe released their joint project “Natural-Bring That Poem Home”.
Aafroqween hosted her own internet radio show “LoveArtLife” on Onthamove Radio from 2007-2011. She was a featured voice on Talaam Acey’s “Morally Bankrupt Volume One: The Wickedest Man In Babylon” and “Mood Demystify”, Queen Sheba’s “Domino Effect”, and Les Nubians “Echoes: Nubian Voyager”. She has been a poetry workshop facilitator, authored and implemented writing curriculum for adult learners and served as an educator for at risk youth and adults with special needs for agencies such as Georgia’s Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities, Employee Wellness Workshops for the US Department of Veteran Affairs, New York Regional Office and Carpenters Union-Minority Workers Training Program NYC/Brownfields NJ. She is the Co-Founder and Creative Director of LoveArtLifeTV, centering voices of the African diaspora through culture and arts; and the CEO of AafroqweenAuthentic, an African influenced lifestyle brand rooted in celebrating the authenticity of the Black woman’s lived experience.
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Charleston, South Carolina native Kimberly Brown (26) is nothing short of a philanthropist in training. She is truly known for being a lover of plants, people, poetry, and purpose! Her focus is on family, women, food security, education, and land rights. From youth sustainability outreach to advocacy with the GA Youth Fellowship, Brown is a woman of service. After moving to Atlanta, Georgia, in 2018 to study Psychology (Georgia State University), she vowed to serve her new community faithfully. She soon joined The Black Student Movement Association, where she learned what it meant to cater to the underserved during their giveaway inspirational days located in Hurt Park (Downtown Atlanta.) This inspired Kimberly to start her organization, B.A.P. (better is always possible) where she and a few of her dorm mates would travel to the different grocery stores and collect food items to bless other college students in need. In 2020, Brown started a program for youth in East Atlanta, educating them on permaculture practices and teaching community economics via the neighborhood market supported by the community garden and local vendors. After two healthy years, Brown decided her outreach wouldn’t end there, and she began to establish herself in the community, partnering with local gardens united with the Food Well Alliance. She currently teaches writers' workshops covering all genres and also educates families about ways to become more self-sufficient in the most Eco-friendly ways via her Organization, EKOU SISTAHS. (EARTH KEEPERS OPERATING IN UNITY) Kimberly’s goal is to bring awareness to fundamental areas of growth that will advance the betterment of communities and each individual being that make up the families of today.
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Martha Caldwell, veteran educator and DEI consultant, draws on the power of story to make the psychological dimensions of identity visible. She has facilitated hundreds of conversations about race, sexuality, and gender experience with thousands of people. Her interactive teaching style enhances empathy, inspires innovative thinking, and catalyzes leadership development.
Martha's articles have appeared in Independent Schools Magazine, Greater Good Magazine, Youth Today, Middle School Journal, and EdWeek. She is the co-author Gender and Sexuality: An Educator's Guide, Let’s Get Real: Exploring Race, Class, and Gender Identities, and Facilitating Conversations about Race. Yet as the parent one trans and one nonbinary child, she is still on a steep learning curve
Martha has a bachelor’s degree in religion and a master’s degree in education from Florida State University.
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Warda is a Colombian-Palestinian artist born in Bogotá, Colombia. Warda finds their joy in the ways in which they utilize different mediums to create pictures that can communicate feelings both introspective and sociocultural.
Having begun their journey in the arts through poetry, they find passion in storytelling of emotions. As their works continued, they found joy in communicating these joys in digital collage art, tatreez, multilingual poetry with the influence of magical realism and surrealism.
This journey intertwined with their love for their cultural heritage and passion for activism both inside and outside of the art realm. Their hope is to create works that reflect some of the emotions and experiences they have lived in an impactful way.
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Storm (she/her) is a Black woman born and raised in West Philadelphia, who has from childhood experienced inequalities and environmental injustices which led her to become a scholar of the Say Yes to Education (SYTE) program. As a scholar of SYTE, Storm learned how to fight for equality and justice for those who look like her. Storm soon learned she had a strong passion for organizing community resources through written art and education.
Storm’s passion for marginalized communities led her to study at a southern HBCU, Spelman College. As an undergraduate there Storm explored Black Literature and immediately participated in the Afrekete Club which ensured black and brown identifying women were treated fairly across the campus. She takes a stance for collective voices and community care to achieve effective and innovative solutions. Storm is driven by seeing the collective grow and flourish in their own agency by standing on principles around self-determination, individuality, and empowerment.
Storm found a way to merge her love of written art and her compassion for her community through Moore College of Art. It was at Moore where Storm earned her Master’s of Art with a foci in Social Engagement. She has used her experience to cultivate community events that promote healthy and safe spaces for individuals in the community to thrive. And as a Project Lead of the Atlanta Black Pride Youth Festival she ensures the collected voices are heard, seen and carry throughout the activities of the annual festival.
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BrinwiththePen, poet songwriter and producer from New Orleans, La, got started writing at 11 years old. Over the next 17 years she crafted her writing skills most influenced musically by Music Soulchild and Lauryn Hill, BrinwiththePen makes art for the lovers and the revolutionaries.
Brin is very active in the Atlanta Poetry Scene hosting and spitting at shows all over the city. To pour back into the community BrinwiththePen curated “The Ink Refill”, a monthly writing workshop for poets to sharpen each other and provide a safe and intentional space for the art of writing and spoken word.BrinwiththePen has plans to bridge the gap between saving the world and making timeless music through poetry.
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Lexi Markham (they/them) is a Sophomore at Paideia School in Atlanta, Georgia. In their free time, they love to write poetry, read, and be outside. In 2024 they joined VOX ATL Youth Poet Laureate Ambassador Program. Lexi helped cofound a Trans Club at their high school, as well as an Environmental Club in their elementary school. They first engaged YOU(th) Belong in March 2023 when they shared poetry at YOU(th) Belong … On The Stage at OUT Front Theater and has volunteered at Compassion-Con and other LGBTQ+ Institute events. They hope to inspire others to fight for LGBTQ+ rights, embrace love, and exist authentically.
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Shawn Johnson aka Mr Fearless is a native of Little Rock, Arkansas. He is a singer, songwriter and spoken word poet who believes in creating safe spaces for independent artists. He is the Creative Director and Operations Manager of Fearless Indie Entertainment Inc based in Atlanta, Georgia established in 2015. Shawn uses his platform to INSPIRE, ENTERTAIN & INFORM.
7:25 PM - 7:55 PM: Tim’m introduces Feature, L. Lamar Wilson
Tim’m West’s inaugural Front Porch event at the Mocha Lounge in Washington, DC in December 2004.
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L. Lamar Wilson (he/We) is the author of Sacrilegion—the 2012 Carolina Wren Press Poetry Series selection, a 2013 Independent Publishers Group bronze medalist, and a 2013 Thom Gunn Award finalist—and co-author of Prime: Poetry and Conversation (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2014). The Gospel Truth, a musical adaptation of Sacrilegion, thrilled capacity audiences in Miami and Tallahassee, Fla., the latter time with a troupe that celebrates the unique embodiment of Wilson and other disabled artists. The Changing Same, a Rada Film Group collaboration that airs on PBS, won the 2019 Reel Sisters of the Diaspora Best Documentary Award and a special jury prize at the 2018 New Orleans Film Festival. The poem featured in the film, “Resurrection Sunday,” earned a Pushcart Prize nod; another came in 2020 for “Quare.” Other works have appeared in The Nation, This Is the Honey (Hatchette, 2024), Bigger than Bravery (Lookout Books, 2022), the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day, African American Review, Black Gay Genius (2014), Bodies Built for Game: The Prairie Schooner Anthology of Contemporary Sports Writing (U of Nebraska P, 2019), Callaloo, Furious Flower: Seeding the Future of African American Poetry (Northwestern UP, 2019), Interim, A Literary Field Guide to Southern Appalachia (U of Georgia P, 2019), The Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, NPR, The 100 Best African American Poems (2010), Obsidian, Oxford American, Poetry, Race and Utopian Desire in American Literature and Society (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019), The Root/The Washington Post, south, TriQuarterly, and elsewhere. Wilson has received fellowships from, among others, the Cave Canem, Civitella Ranieri, Ragdale, and Hurston-Wright foundations. He’s a Florida A&M alumnus and holds an MFA from Virginia Tech and a doctorate in African American and multiethnic American poetics from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Wilson, an Affrilachian Poet and the 2024-2025 Mohr Visiting Poet at Stanford University,
teaches creative writing, film and gender studies, and African American poetics at Florida State University and in the Mississippi University for Women’s low-residency MFA program.
An Excerpt About Sacrilegion by L. Lamar Wilson from Lambda Literary Review
Sylvia Plath once remarked, “I think writers are the most narcissistic people. Well, I mustn’t say this, I like many of them, a great many of my friends are writers.” To be a narcissist or, rather, one who is deeply in love with oneself – even excessively – might be considered an act of revolution, especially in an age when many marginalized people in our world have been tutored in the ways of self-hatred.
To be a writer, to be one who is attuned to reading and reinterpreting the metaphors of life and death, ugliness and beauty, and truth and deceit, is to be engaged in a narcissistic endeavor precisely because writers create worlds drawn from the reservoir of their imaginations. I think poets, like all writers, are narcissistic. And like Plath, I like a great many of them. Indeed, some are my friends.
L. Lamar Wilson is one those great writer-friends who is, as he notes, “prone to arrogant behavior”: a black-queer-(dis)abled-praying poet whose personhood might be rendered illegible in a world often organized around whiteness, heterosexuality, and able-bodied privilege. It seems logical, then, that arrogance is used to counteract processes of invisibility. And what better way to animate oneself and one’s imagined world than through the word, through poetry.
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Read the full article HERE