Difference between revisions of "Neta Bomani"

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<b>Neta Bomani</b> is a Tanzanian-Malawian zinester based in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
 
<b>Neta Bomani</b> is a Tanzanian-Malawian zinester based in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
  
On January 28th 2021, as part of a grad school class called ''100 Days of Making'', Bomani began making one zine every day and documenting each one on a dedicated [https://twitter.com/netabomani/status/1354911521344794627/ Twitter thread].
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On January 28th 2021, as part of a NYU grad school class called ''100 Days of Making'', Bomani began making one zine every day and documenting each one on a dedicated [https://twitter.com/netabomani/status/1354911521344794627/ Twitter thread].
  
 
The first zine in the series focused on jazz pianist and composer Mary Lou Williams, while their last zine (published on May 8th, 2021) was a "storybook for children and adults" focusing on computational history and technology, called ''Dark Matter Objects: Technologies of Capture and Things That Can’t Be Held''.
 
The first zine in the series focused on jazz pianist and composer Mary Lou Williams, while their last zine (published on May 8th, 2021) was a "storybook for children and adults" focusing on computational history and technology, called ''Dark Matter Objects: Technologies of Capture and Things That Can’t Be Held''.

Revision as of 02:23, 8 May 2021

Neta Bomani is a Tanzanian-Malawian zinester based in Brooklyn, New York, U.S.

On January 28th 2021, as part of a NYU grad school class called 100 Days of Making, Bomani began making one zine every day and documenting each one on a dedicated Twitter thread.

The first zine in the series focused on jazz pianist and composer Mary Lou Williams, while their last zine (published on May 8th, 2021) was a "storybook for children and adults" focusing on computational history and technology, called Dark Matter Objects: Technologies of Capture and Things That Can’t Be Held.

100 days / 100 zines

What follows is comprehensive list of Bomani's 100 zines, derived from her Twitter thread.

  • Day 1: A paper study and meditation on jazz pianist and composer Mary Lou Williams. (view)
  • Day 2: A zine made from a poem Bomani wrote called “one box two another”, which was about “a year of virtual still” due to the COVID19 pandemic and her experience of her first Zoom funeral. (view)
  • Day 3: A zine about the component parts of basic circuitry, which featured copper tape (and a circuit) throughout. (view)
  • Day 4: A zine meditation on actor, model and author Cicely Tyson, who had recently passed away. (view)
  • Day 5: A focus on a zine from Bomani's personal archive: Black Women & Self Defense (Thoughts on Personal Space & Reclaiming Our Streets by artist and author Naomi M Moyer. (view)
  • Day 6: A one-page zine featuring a photocopied spread from Zong! - a series of poems by M. NourbeSe Philip reflecting on the fragmented history of slavery, which was paired with images from documented slave ship diagrams. (view)
  • Day 7: A zine called The ABCs of Black Radicals which featured "an inexhaustive list of black radicals, socialists, communists, separatists, pan africanists, abolitionists, feminists, etc." (view)
  • Day 8: A zine paper circuit collage of Invisible Man Retreat - a photo by Gordon Parks taken for Ralph Ellison’s book the Invisible Man in 1952. (view)
  • Day 9: A zine featuring a selection of FBI documents on Trayvon Martin, Prince, MOVE, Fannie Lou Hamer and Toni Morrison, which was kettle stitched together on pastel yellow paper. (view)
  • Day 10: An algorithmically-generated fanzine of Fred Moten in conversation with Transformer - a “modern neural network” programmed with the function to complete text prompts. Bomani asked Transformer questions, scraped from Moten’s book The Universal Machine. (view)

List last updated May 8th, 2021.