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#short pico supremacy
dracomeir · 5 months
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"These are my bitches."
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shadesofnavy · 1 year
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For a certain fic of mine lol
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triggcrhappy · 2 years
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So anyway haha short pico and tall bf supremacy uwu
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nofomoartworld · 7 years
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Hyperallergic: A Boyle Heights Alliance Accuses Charles Gaines and Other Artists of Ignoring Local Voices
Community picket at the opening of David Reed’s exhibition at 356 Mission (all images courtesy B.H.A.A.A.D. unless otherwise noted)
Editor’s Note: The following open letter was sent to Hyperallergic by Boyle Heights Alliance Against Artwashing and Displacement (B.H.A.A.A.D.). It was written in response to an article about gentrification by the artist Charles Gaines. 
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This collectively written letter was drafted and revised between March 28 and May 24, 2017. In that time period in Boyle Heights, seven residents have been picked up by Border Patrol or Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). In the last year, five residents have been shot and killed by the LAPD — two of whom are the youngest people killed by police in Los Angeles. We write in a context of urgency.
In February, the APAN (Artists’ Political Action Network) organized a meeting at the Boyle Heights gallery 356 Mission that was billed as a “call to political action” to fight a “culture of fear, hatred, and exclusion.” On the day of the event, DBH (Defend Boyle Heights) and B.H.A.A.A.D. (Boyle Heights Alliance Against Artwashing and Displacement), in protest of holding a meeting of that nature at a gallery that contributes to gentrification and displacement drew a picket line outside the gallery space. Some artists crossed the picket line; some did not and stood in solidarity. In response, Charles Gaines circulated an essay through the APAN public network that prioritizes the voices of well-established artists over the demands of the Boyle Heights community.
A Tweet from a realtor
An Open Letter to Charles Gaines and the Artists of APAN
It’s not up to you to author the terms of struggle for a poor and working class neighborhood of color that is currently under housing siege. You are not exempt from reckoning with the racial and economic disparities at hand — especially you, who own homes or multiple properties, or who run art studios, work at universities, and have considerable cultural and institutional capital.
Gaines’s letter engages in a deeply troubling mystification of gentrification, a process he describes as one that, “hardly anyone understands.” What we have here is an epistemological conflict. Gaines and his peers’ notions of information and politics are being confronted by the knowledge and experience of Boyle Heights residents. People whose rent increased 300% understand gentrification. People who are called “nightmare tenants” understand gentrification. People who have been harassed and evicted by landlords, the police, and ICE understand gentrification. Gentrification is a well-studied, well-documented, and predictable process. Gentrification in its current form has been tearing up communities from New York City to New Orleans, from Detroit to Los Angeles. Thorough examples of writing on this process, specific to Boyle Heights, can be found in Magally Miranda and Kyle Lane-McKinley’s article on artwashing in a Blade of Grass and B.H.A.A.A.D.’s “The Short History of a Long Struggle.”
Boyle Heights has a poverty rate of 33% and a median income of $33,253, which is a lower median income than the average for all of Los Angeles, which stands at $53,000. Homeownership rates in Boyle Heights are at 11 percent. Low rates of homeownership have long displaced residents. In the residential community in Boyle Heights closest to where the galleries are located (Pico Aliso) 989 public housing families were displaced by efforts to “to improve the community.” Gentrification has led to the criminalization of youth and immigrants who live in the neighborhood as development moves forward. Art galleries are calling the cops for graffiti complaints, and participating in a hate crime investigation, opened after the graffiti “Fuck White Art” was written on Nicodim Gallery in November 2016. This came just months after 14-year-old Jesse Romero was murdered by the LAPD in broad daylight for tagging. In 2016, Los Angeles had the highest number of police shootings in the United States.
Until artists are willing to relinquish their demand for unchecked access to all neighborhoods at their convenience, for their sheer entitlement to space at the expense of others’ homes, artists will not truly honor the intersectional struggles going on right under their noses.
It is an outrage for well-established artists and artists with financial and housing security — often in more than one city — to contest the voices of Boyle Heights residents. We should not privilege the elite’s need to understand these processes on their own terms. Newcomers should practice solidarity and side with anti-gentrification activists, many of whom are long-time Boyle Heights residents who have been resisting displacement and erasure for the last 30 years! Is it reasonable to treat Gaines’s and APAN’s reductive analysis of the conditions in Boyle Heights as superior to the inductive, experiential knowledge that forges local on-the-ground resistance? Supporters of the boycott B.H.A.A.A.D and DBH have called against Boyle Heights galleries participating in artwashing and displacement and stressed that our actions come out of a long-term history of resistance and struggle. Gaines should study this background before making superficial and inaccurate comparisons with neighborhoods in New York City.
Some of Donald Trump’s most egregious policies can be found in the intersections of racism, housing, investment, policing, and displacement patterns going on outside the doors of some of the very art spaces where APAN seeks to galvanize its political work. Artists who want to help fight ICE deportations, racist police abuse, and other terrors of the US government (pre- and post-Trump), must trust the critical analysis and strategies of the people most affected by these abuses.
Twenty-two-year-old immigrant rights activist Claudia Ruede, one of the seven Boyle Heights residents detained by Border Patrol (image courtesy Immigrant Youth Coalition)
Gaines writes:
We knew that 356 Mission was one of the sites targeted by the Boyle Heights boycott, but we thought that gentrification could be one of the issues that we can address together with the activists. However, none of the Boyle Heights activists responded to our invitation, but they did show up to protest the APAN meeting itself.
  Our response:
If you know there is a boycott, you don’t ask the community holding the boycott to cross their own picket line to “discuss” gentrification issues with you. If APAN is interested in deepening their understanding of the anti-artwashing and anti-gentrification fight going on in Boyle Heights, begin by understanding your role in advancing many of these forces of displacement. Ask where the groups fighting gentrification would like to meet, and what they see as the most urgent work to be done.
  Artists with mobility to relocate and establish a home and art practice in LA should stop looking to invent their version of “the struggle.” Seek humility towards people facing much more intense vulnerabilities. Artists and gentrifiers should ask how they can join and support the ongoing struggles in our neighborhood. That means understanding who and what was here before you arrived.
  The fight for housing justice and the end of artists and cultural institutions acting as channels for real estate development is absolutely politically tenable. We have already gained significant momentum and closed down one gallery; we have convinced some artists to abandon Boyle Heights real estate. Tenants rights groups are growing in size, as are eviction defenses, alongside the fight for universal rent control.
  Artists cannot organize around politics, make political art, and yet ignore the material impacts and realities of their own presence, which only reinforces the violence of racial and economic privilege. Stop co-opting the struggle of those who are actually fighting for their community!
  To organize and resist in the time of Trump is just another day in the USA. To insist that this regime requires new forms of organizing is to ignore the questions and realities that we have been facing since long before January 2017. We have found some questions so crucial that we had to shout them in the streets, like, “When your rent becomes unaffordable, where will you go?” And the urgent reality that “Eviction = Death.”
  Gaines goes on to describe “white anti-mainstream” artists who deprive communities of color of resources in order to keep low-rent neighborhoods economically depressed, opposing developments and gentrification for their own benefit. Perhaps these “white anti-mainstream” artists Gaines takes aim at, who he sees taking advantage of communities of color, are the ones that could be found packed into the APAN meeting. Although there is no reason to defend the countless forms of liberal white supremacy, this misses the mark in Boyle Heights, where those directly impacted by gentrification are leading the struggle for their right to exist. He ends the letter with “This is why the whites who have moved in to Boyle Heights and who are anti-gentrification activists wrongly see themselves as resisters and not agents of gentrification.” It’s unfortunate that Gaines — a prominent artist of color who we imagine is no stranger to the ways racism can make people invisible — fails to recognize that women of color activists are the primary engines behind the fight against displacement in Boyle Heights.
In addition to the POC groups that are part of the Boyle Heights Alliance (Union de Vecinos and Defend Boyle Heights), other POC anti-gentrification groups involved in struggles across Los Angeles include LA Community Action Network, People Organized for Westside Renewal, Resist Displacement Los Angeles, El Sereno Against Gentrification, North East Los Angeles Alliance, Uplift Inglewood, Crenshaw Subway Coalition, and Chinatown Community for Equitable Development, in addition to the five local chapters of the LA Tenants Union led by strong POC majorities. Gaines assumes that POC residents want to be taken up in the arms of fantastic, benevolent redevelopment schemes, and that, as he writes, “These communities want to become socially and economically mainstreamed.” He echoes the constant chorus of artists and gentrifiers who insist displacement is inevitable and refuse to cede any position to those fighting for fair housing and the most basic rights, in effect erasing POC labor and struggle against so-called development. 
The group gathered inside 356 Mission for the Artists’ Political Action Network meeting
The struggle for sustainable housing, self-determination, and against artwashing in Boyle Heights is led by Mexican, Chicanx, and Central and South American people. The focus on white accomplices working with B.H.A.A.A.D. obfuscates a history and present reality where the bulk of the work is done by networks of Latinx organizers in DBH who are made up of the Ovarian Psycos, Serve the People – Los Angeles, Union de Vecinos, East Los Angeles Brown Berets, Wyvernwood residents, Cat Scan Collective, and Undeportables Productions, among many others. All these groups already existed when the galleries moved into Boyle Heights, and are a part of a long and successful history of struggle in Los Angeles stretches back to the Chicano blowouts, the Chicano Moratorium, and fights against the incinerator and water privatizations, as well as a prison on the border of Vernon and Boyle Heights, and the constant work to fight for housing. Why is the coalition of mostly POC groups so difficult to understand? B.H.A.A.A.D. is a coalition of many people of differing races and ethnicities which includes some white accomplices acting in solidarity, in hopes of creating meaningful and long overdue confrontations with their peers who refuse to cede entitlements around race, art, capital, and real estate. There is no reason (other than white supremacy and its reverberations) to foreground the work of the white accomplices in B.H.A.A.A.D. over the work of POC resisters in the coalition.
Gaines describes the “surprise,” “trauma,” and “despair” of the arts community and their “desire to do something” on the heels of the Trump election. Using the trauma of the arts community as his central frame, Gaines gives primacy to the abstract pain of the educated, mostly white, blue-chip professional artists and academics who attended the APAN meeting, over the actual threats of displacement and the historic decades of resistance of a community. 
For millions of people who live in constant struggle across the US the ascendency of this openly fascist regime was no surprise. Progressive politics exist in a ruthlessly racist, capitalist context. They have made very little social advancements, and are repeatedly propped up by open hostility to POC, trans, queer, low-income, and undocumented people. Gaines’s lament that the Trump victory marked the “end of progressive politics” in the US replicates the liberal democratic machine that is as responsible for the results as any conservative or right-wing agenda. “Progressive” artists imagine themselves to be separate from this system, and mistake things like “diversity” and “inclusion” for substantive, material concessions, including the forfeiture of accessing certain spaces, as well as opportunities and positions of artistic or intellectual authority. This confusion of “progress” with actual redistribution of wealth and freedom for self-determination is similar to the compromises politicians make in search of liberal solutions that offer no moral or material challenge to the violence, racism, and misogyny of the status quo.
We can all do better. As residents of the most rampant exporter of imperialism and neo-colonial white-supremacist brutality we must. Complacent reform-oriented political discourse will not improve our conditions. We are not fighting for a cheap place to live — we are fighting for all our ways of life to matter as much as the lives that are very different from our own. This fight is only ours if it includes all those who are rejected and excluded: black people, brown people, queer and trans people, the undocumented, the poor, the ones with records of incarceration, the disabled, the chronically ill, the mothers, those forced into active confrontations with the systems at-hand — the ones who have long been fighting the fight.
Signed,
B.H.A.A.A.D. 
Boyle Heights Alliance Against Artwashing and Displacement
The post A Boyle Heights Alliance Accuses Charles Gaines and Other Artists of Ignoring Local Voices appeared first on Hyperallergic.
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dracomeir · 7 months
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Pico Dankworth from @shadesofnavy's AU
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dracomeir · 9 months
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Pico standing on Darnell’s shoulders like he’s a sniper post. They be forming a tower of incoming blazing destruction and chaos.
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dracomeir · 9 months
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dracomeir · 9 months
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dracomeir · 7 months
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LAST QUESTION AND I'LL STOP BOTHERING SJHSKJ (I'm obsessed so sorry)
Renegade Detective AU gang heights?
Pico: 5’ 6” Darnell: 6’ 2” Nene: 5’ 8” BF: 5’ 11”
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dracomeir · 7 months
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To be honest, idk if I’ll ever write my bf x pico fic and the sequel to it where Pico is a detective, and bf is his emotional support demon who also happens to be an incubus. (And no. There isn’t going to be any fun times if I ever write them even though I have them set as my only 18+ fics on my list. This ace boy going to stick with suggestive only.)
Reason why I don’t think I will write these stories is because I know I’ll end up triggering myself. It was going to be a slow burn narrative with Pico realizing BF never used magic to make him fall in love before they broke up a few years ago, him losing something important when he saves BF from an arch demon, and his journey through depression after losing said thing. These gays don’t get together until the end of the first story. The sequel would be where they tease each other way more, and the ginger is back to his confident self before shit hits the fan in the first story. It was also going to be where BF finally gains enough power to become an arch demon himself. (This is as spoiler free as I can make it.)
But, but also, I wanted bottom Pico content which is why I made this AU in the first place, and BF is an annoying bastard who tries to turn everything Pico says into something dirty, and this dumb incubus also plays saxophone to create BGM for everything the ginger does, and he also knows what to say to make him shut up in embarrassment, and makes him question if he isn’t a top after all, and, and, um… Despite all this, BF doesn’t try to get together with him until everything is sorted out. He wants Pico to fully trust him again, and one wrong move can cause the ginger to think he’s using demonic magic to influence him.
Anyway, I don’t have the mental will to do something this dark right now. I think I’ll try to rework this AU where depression isn’t much of a factor, but I feel like the story won’t hit as hard if I did. We’ll see how I feel once I write most of my other stories on my long ass list.
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shadesofnavy · 9 months
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Would it be odd for me to say that I was half-expecting to see collars with Bitch on both Cherry and Pico after seeing the Daddy collar on Keith lol?
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AKHDSHAJ
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shadesofnavy · 10 months
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It's so nice to see a fellow short Pico & GF and tall himbo BF enjoyer! Could I hear some trivia about your trio there? Oh, and are you a shameless shipper who ships them with yo friends' versions of the trio? If so you're very based. ;]
Aw thank you :) yes I'm a bit of a shameless shipper here, just love pairing those who'd get along with my trio here lol. I'll give a little in-sight on these three fellows here so y'all can get to know them more: -Boyfriend is 35, Girlfriend is 34 and Pico is 36 -I gave them legitimate names since they're from a more "normal" world compare to other AUs--Keith Burlington, Cherry Davis and Pico Dankworth--however I honestly don't think it's that big of a deal to call them bf and gf for simplicity's sake. Wondering if I should make those tags now tho.. -Cherry is actually not a demon here... surprise..? -Keith used to go to the gym every few times a week since he was a teenager, however he's stopped ever since he started working on making music and preforming on local gigs around Newsground City -Cherry serves as a full-time cook at a casual restaurant (the best in town so far) -She has a culinary degree -Keith dropped out of college after trying to get a music degree. He claims it was "too finicky" for him -He wouldn't have graduated high school if it weren't for Cherry urging him to try -Keith and Cherry have known each other since early high school (he was 16 and she was 15) -Pico is a surreptitious hitman known only to the world of crime going about the city. He's been living tied to it since he was a deserted teenager just after surviving the infamous school shooting -Pico is actually a good cook himself, however he has a very low appetite and rarely ever feeds himself a decent meal -He's mildly malnourished because of that and is schizophrenic -He's also caffeine intolerant and addicted to smoking -Keith is alcohol tolerant and loves any food with juicy meat -He can grill and cook any kind of meat and make pancakes. Other than that, it's a disaster -He leaves the kitchen a mess whenever he cooks -Cherry does not approve of the statement above -They're all more or less bisexual -Pico gets cold very easily, so he always wears a turtleneck, hoodie and jacket. In the summertime he'll only stick with his turtleneck and maybe a sleeveless hoodie -Despite his frail appearance he's as firm as a log -Pico's gun is the MAC-10 submachine gun; he uses a suppressor with it. He also owns a glock -Cherry's dad once called Pico to try and assassinate Keith (unbeknownst to the ginger who it was), but her mother managed to stop him in time before anything was settled -Edit: I forgot to add that Keith also has ADHD, but I feel as though every Boyfriend has that so yeah lol
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