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  • Happening this Saturday 6/21 & other programming that may interest YOU

Happening this Saturday 6/21 & other programming that may interest YOU

Happy Monday Fam,

Did you know that in 1881, a group of Black washerwomen in Atlanta boldly organized a citywide strike to demand fair pay and safer working conditions? These women were not only freedom fighters — they were artisans too, making quilts, jams, soaps, and more to support themselves and their communities.

In their honor, we’re bringing that spirit of creativity, resistance, and sisterhood to life.

Join us Saturday, June 21st at 2PM for THE WASH, a powerful play celebrating Black women, everyday acts of resistance, and the bonds that hold us together — presented by New Federal Theatre at WP Theater.

🧼 Before and after the show, browse our Women’s Artisan Market, featuring handmade goods by incredible local creatives, including:

🪡 Aprons by Sowing Good Vibes (@natty8dread)

🌿 Skin crèmes & oils by ululeko x TWIN (@twin.cafe_)

🕯️ Candles by BerryGirl Scents (@berrygirl_scents)

💎 Jewelry & journals by State of Beading & JustKeebs (@stateofbeading, @justkeebs)

🧼 Soaps by RoseGold Skin (@imalucas_)

🎨 Collage prints by Gia Anansi-Shakur (@giatheconqueror)

🧶 Crochet crafts by SimplyFati

💌 Affirmation cards by Keisha-Gaye Anderson (@keishagayeanderson)

🍿 Popcorn by MamaPOPS

& more!

💫 Doors open at 11:30AM — come early to shop!

🎟️ Discounted tickets available for the show

📍 WP Theater, 2162 Broadway @ 76th St., NYC

This is more than a play. It’s a celebration. A market. A gathering. A tribute to Black women’s brilliance across generations.

Come through and experience THE WASH. 💛💜💙

Upcoming events

FRIDAY NIGHT QUILT with Michelle Bishop  / Friday Nights: June 20, 27; July 11, 18, 25 & August 8 / 6pm - 8pm / 6 sessions. Materials include / $30 / Ages 16 and up

Join poet & artist Keisha-Gaye Anderson for BOOKS & BEATS.

If you would like to vend here please fill out this form.

About Nzingha

Born at home to midwife Mama Nonkululeko Tyehemba, and caught by midwife Mama Nakawe Cuebas, Nzingha Nomsa Taiwo Tyehemba grew up on 130th Street and Saint Nick in Harlem, NY. She is a poet, healing artist, and operations professional with experiences spanning Western Massachusetts, Senegal, Ghana, New Orleans, and Cuba. She holds a Bachelor's in Black Studies from Amherst College and a Master's in Adolescent Special Education from CUNY-Hunter College. In 2020, Nzingha led production and translation of A Fearless Spring, a twenty-eight-part poem which exists now in Spanish, Kreyol, Wolof, Asante-Twi, Amharic, French, and GriotLite ( a combination of African American Vernacular English and visual cues rendered by the poet Gia Anansi-Shakur). A kidney transplant survivor and facilitator of healing circles, Nzingha is committed to holistic health, wellness, and collective fellowship. Her publications and productions include: The Feminist Wire, Collective Fallout, each other’s harvest: an afternoon of poetry, community, and address from Cave Canem at the National Museum of African-American History & Culture, and Def Dance Jam Workshop – PONO Movement Performance. Nzingha has received fellowships, grants, and awards from the Laundromat Project and Dance / NYC as well as recognitions from the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Foundation, Citizens Committee of New York City, and Northfield Mount Hermon’s Vivian Dandridge White Prize. She lives and makes life with her husband, John "Of All Trades" Hazelton, and multiple frond; including a six foot tall bird of paradise, two money trees, two fiddle leaf figs, a ZZ plant...and well, this list could go on.