Alternate Currents Discussion Series

Amplify Arts

Amplify's Alternate Currents discussions offer insight, context, and expand on perspectives around how justice in the arts is interpreted, documented, and enacted.

  1. AC Discussion | Small Energies

    04/29/2025

    AC Discussion | Small Energies

    Recently, Amplify worked with MdW Atlas as guest editors on a series of posts running throughout the month of April. Artists and organizers Lydia Cheshewalla, Patrick Costello, and Alajia McKizia, all of whom have connections to Omaha, and the Midwest more broadly, through land, lineage, and kinships, contributed to the series. As a point of departure, we asked them to consider composting as a framework for transformation, renewal, and exchange and referenced Carolyn Goldsmith's Compost, A Cosmic View with Practical Suggestions, a now out of print volume published in 1973 that includes tips for composters, gestural drawings, and prompts that lend the text a lyrical quality, which follow: "Breaking down / is / Building up" "Digesting is transforming" "Plants emerge as a natural consequence of / all that is happening / inside the soil body.” "You / Can Stir the Great Mix" “Small energies / Acting on each other / Reacting to each other” Goldsmith's book anchors composting, in an expanded context, as a practical and theoretical tool for breaking down certain histories, or things we’ve inherited, to situate and carry forward ways of knowing rooted in relationship, understanding, and empathy. The three artists who made work in response share affinities across geography and discipline in their approaches to multi-species care and embracing ecological entanglements in their work, practices that hold particularly resonance in this moment when changes in the political sphere stand to affect how we move toward realizing a more ecologically just and balanced future. We sat down with them not too long ago to talk more about their contributions, and the small energies that continue to move us forward.

    42 min
  2. 01/26/2022

    AC Interview | Zedeka Poindexter

    We recently sat down with Zedeka Poindexter, Amplify's 2022-23 Public Impact Grant recipient. Zedeka was awarded a Public Impact Grant by an external selection panel in the amount of $10,000 to develop new, public-facing work that interrogates the disparities Black women confront in the healthcare system. Over the course of her two-year grant term, Zedeka will conduct and transcribe interviews with Black women to gather stories that shine a light on how their lived experiences, bodies, and voices are often minimized, manipulated, and ignored when seeking medical care. Zedeka will transmute these stories into a layered choreopoem that uses sight, sound, touch, and feeling as tools to center empathy and understanding. The finished piece will have a local run and dedicated performances for audiences of Omaha-area medical practitioners specifically. As an integrated piece of her staged work, Zedeka will also make her process simple to replicate for other communities by developing an interview guide, transcript analysis toolkit, and production roadmap. Zedeka Poindexter is a North Omaha-born writer and performer. In her work, she builds a historical record through poems and essays that draw on all five physical senses to connect with readers and listeners. Raised in multi-generational homes by descendants of the Great Migration, she draws on issues of race, class, struggle, and joy to fuel her work. Zedeka has worked with the Nebraska Writers Collective for over ten years to provide writing and performance education in schools, community organizations, and correctional facilities. As Slam Master for the Omaha Poetry Slam, she guided local artists through generating new work, stage performances, and fundraising. She is the first woman, and the only woman of color, to be named Omaha City Poetry Slam champion. As a member of Omaha’s poetry slam team, she qualified for semi-finals at the National Poetry Slam. Only one other team achieved this honor in its 18-year history.

    28 min

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Amplify's Alternate Currents discussions offer insight, context, and expand on perspectives around how justice in the arts is interpreted, documented, and enacted.