Appomattox Regional Governor s School grad gets performing scholarship progress-index.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from progress-index.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Lil Nas X’s ‘Satan Shoes’ Collaboration Get Sued By Nike
Prankster First Lady Jill Biden Puts on Disguise for April Fools’ Day
‘Dynasty’ Star Emma Samms Still Symptomatic 1 Year After COVID-19 Diagnosis
Murder Hornet Hunters on Alert as Warm Weather Could Reveal Growing Numbers
1 Capitol Police Officer Killed, 1 Injured After Motorist Drives Into Gate
Kerry Washington Jumps in Her Pool During SAG Awards Broadcast From Home
Los Angeles Sheriff’s Deputies Shoot Tear Gas Into Car With 9-Year-Old Inside
Biracial Couples Say Struggles Meghan and Harry Face are Familiar
Nurse Surprises Her Basketball Star Son After a Year on Front Lines
âBrown Ballerinas for Changeâ working to diversify the arts
âBrown Ballerinas for Changeâ working to diversify the arts By Jasmine Turner | February 19, 2021 at 2:46 PM EST - Updated March 13 at 7:50 PM
RICHMOND, Va. (WWBT) - Since going viral through a photo at the Lee Monument, four teenage dancers have been advocating for social justice and change, and working towards diversifying the arts.
Ava Holloway, Kennedy George and Sophia Chambliss and Ava Holloway, dancers at the Central Virginia Dance Academy cofounded âBrown Ballerinaâs for Changeâ over the summer, as they continued to gain popularity and requests for performances following the photo.
A Reuters photographer saw the young Black dancers standing proudly
en pointe in front of the graffiti-laced statue; they were wearing black tutus and raising their fists in a symbol of strength. She asked if she could take their picture, and when Reuters posted the photo to social media, it went viral. Fast.
The image almost instantly became an iconic photo of the Black Lives Matter movement, with celebrities retweeting it and national publications such as Vanity Fair and Vogue running the photo with stories on the Confederate statues and Black Lives Matter.
Kennedy and Ava suddenly found themselves in a position to be a voice for change. And they decided to use it.