6.10.2019

Ancestor/Angels Claim Five: Camille Billops, J. Michael Dash, Joe Overstreet, Dr. Patricia Bath, Dr. Niara Sudarkasa*

By Gloria Dulan-Wilson

Hello All:

The population of the Realm of Ancestor/Angel increased recently and we are both at a loss and simultaneously grateful for their having lived among us.  I mentioned that five have made their transition - Four are featured here in the articles below; the fifth, *Dr. Niara Sudarkasa, former president of my Alma Mater, Lincoln University, and the first woman to serve in that capacity, will be covered in a separate Post.  

My condolences to the family, friends and fans of these wonderful Brothers and Sisters.  We will treasure and honor their contributions to our lives - 

Stay Blessed & 
ECLECTICALLY BLACK 
Gloria



NYU Institute of African American Affairs
IN MEMORIAM
Camille Billops
(1933 – 2019)
J. Michael Dash
(1948 – 2019)
Joe Overstreet
(1933 – 2019)

It is with great sadness we announce the passing of these three great collaborators, colleagues and friends of the Institute of African American Affairs & Center for Black Visual Culture:
Although Camille Billops (1933 – June 1, 2019) began her career as a sculptor, ceramist, and painter, Billops is best known for documentary works like Finding Christa (1991) which the Institute/Center had once screened as part of its programming. The 55-minute film recounts why Billops gave up her four-year-old daughter and how they reconnected more than two decades later. When the film showed at the Sundance Film Festival in 1992, Finding Christa received the Grand Jury Prize for Documentary, making Billops the first Black woman to win the award.  In 1968, the Hatch-Billops Collection began with James Hatch, a professor of theater at UCLA. Responding to the lack of publications on African American art and culture, Billops and Hatch began collecting thousands of books and other printed materials, more than 1,200 interviews, and scripts of nearly 1,000 plays. Once housed in a SoHo loft in lower Manhattan, the Collection is now largely located as an archive in their name at the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Books Library at Emory University in Atlanta. From 1981-1999, Billops oversaw Artist and Influence: The Journal of Black American Cultural History, an annual journal featuring interviews with noted American "marginalized artists" across a wide range of genres. Billops was also a  printmaker and educator.
Professor Jean Michael Dash (1948June 2, 2019) had been a long-time supporter of the Institute/Center’s programming.  In 2016, he moderated one of the conversations in The Caribbean Imaginary Series (https://nyuiaaa.org/event-items/caryl-phillips/). Born in 1948 in Trinidad, Dash was a professor in the Department of French Literature, Thought and Culture and in the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis (SCA) at New York University, where he had been on the faculty since 1999.  Dash earned bachelor’s (1969) and doctoral degrees (1973) from the University of the West Indies in Mona, Jamaica. Prior to coming to NYU, Dash had been a professor at the University of the West Indies in Mona, Jamaica, where he also chaired its Department of Modern Languages and Literatures as well as its Department of French. He also had stints as a visiting professor at the University of New Mexico and Howard University and as a lecturer at Nigeria’s Ahamadu Bello University and the University of the West Indies in Barbados. A specialist of Haitian literature and French Caribbean writers, he brought a new focus to French-language writers writing outside of France. Dash’s publications include Edouard Glissant (1995), The Other America: Caribbean Literature in a New World Context (1998), Haiti and the United States (1988), and Culture and Customs of Haiti (2001). For more information including thoughts,  testimonies  and plans for a celebration of his life and work please visit http://as.nyu.edu/french/people/inmemoriam.html
In the 1950s and early 1960s, Mississippi-born painter Joe Overstreet (1933 – June 4, 2019) was associated with the Abstract Expressionist movement. During the Civil Rights Movement he became known for works such as Strange Fruit and The New Jemima, which reflected his interest in contemporary social issues and the Black Arts Movement. He also worked with Amiri Baraka as the Art Director for the Black Arts Repertory Theatre and School in Harlem, and in 1974 he co-founded Kenkeleba House, an East Village gallery and studio. In the 1980s he returned to figuration with his Storyville paintings, which recall the New Orleans jazz scene of the early 1900s. His work draws on a variety of influences, including his own African American heritage, and has been exhibited in galleries around the world.  Overstreet was a major innovator in taking the canvas off the wall.  In his “Flight Pattern” series of the early 1970s, painted, unstretched canvases are tethered with ropes to the ceiling, walls, and floor. Over the past several decades, Overstreet has been a relentless experimenter– investigating both the spatial and textural possibilities of painting, and also complex cultural histories. His artwork is featured on the cover of Black Renaissance/Renaissance Noire (Summer 2018 Vol. 18 No.2) published by the Institute of African American Affairs & Center for Black Visual Culture, New York University.


Dr. Patricia Bath, 76, Who Took On Blindness and Earned a Patent, Dies


Dr. Patricia Bath in about 1980.
A doctor, researcher and educator, she took a special interest in combating preventable blindness in underserved populations.  Creditvia Eraka Bath
Patricia E. Bath, an ophthalmologist who took a special interest in combating preventable blindness in underserved populations and along the way became the first black female doctor to patent a medical invention, a laser device for treating cataracts, died on Thursday in San Francisco. She was 76.
Her daughter, Eraka Bath, said Dr. Bath had died after a brief illness.
Dr. Bath was an educator and researcher as well as a physician. She began her medical career in New York and in 1974 joined the faculties of the University of California, Los Angeles, and the Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science in that city.
When she was just out of medical school, working as an intern at Harlem Hospital and then at an eye clinic at Columbia University, she noticed discrepancies in vision problems between the largely black patient population at Harlem and the largely white one at Columbia. Her observations led her to document that blindness was twice as prevalent among black people as among white people — findings that instilled in her a lifelong commitment to bringing quality eye care to those who might not otherwise have access to it.
In the early 1980s, her work with cataract patients and related research led her to envision the device that became known as the laserphaco probe, which uses laser technology to remove cataracts, which cloud the lens of the eye.
“When she first conceived of the device in 1981, her idea was more advanced than the technology available at the time,” according to a biography of Dr. Bath in Changing the Face of Medicine, an online exhibition of the National Library of Medicine that spotlights women in medicine. “It took her nearly five years to complete the research and testing needed to make it work and apply for a patent. Today the device is use worldwide.”
Dr. Bath in an undated photo. Her “personal best moment,” she said, was when she used an implant procedure to restore the sight of a North African woman who had been blind for 30 years.Creditvia Eraka Bath

The United States Patent and Trademark Office, which has singled out Dr. Bath’s achievement several times over the years, said in a 2014 news release that the device had “helped restore or improve vision to millions of patients worldwide.”
By the time her patent for the device was approved in 1988, Dr. Bath was well along in her quest to bring eye care to people with limited access to health care. In 1976 she was a founder of the nonprofit American Institute for the Prevention of Blindness, along with Alfred Cannon, a psychiatrist, and Aaron Ifekwunigwe, a pediatrician. The organization has promoted what Dr. Bath called community ophthalmology, which advances optic health through grass-roots screenings, treatments and education.
In an interview for the Changing the Face of Medicine exhibition, Dr. Bath described her “personal best moment”: using an implant procedure called keratoprosthesis to restore the sight of a woman in North Africa who had been blind for 30 years.


Patricia Bath On Being The First Person To Invent & Demonstrate Laserphaco Cataract Surgery | TIME

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gcE_QMTBNW4#action=share


Dr. Bath in an undated photo. Her “personal best moment,” she said, was when she used an implant procedure to restore the sight of a North African woman who had been blind for 30 years.Creditvia Eraka Bath
 

“The ability to restore sight is the ultimate reward,” she said.
Patricia Era Bath was born in Harlem on Nov. 4, 1942. Her father, Rupert, an immigrant from Trinidad, was a motorman for the New York City subway system. Her mother, Gladys (Elliott) Bath, worked as a housekeeper and, Dr. Bath often said, sparked her interest in science by buying her a chemistry set when she was a girl.
“I wanted to pretend-play and model myself after scientists,” she told Time magazine when it included her in its “Women Who Are Changing the World” project in 2017. “When we would play nurse and doctor, I didn’t want to be forced to play the role of the nurse. I wanted to be the one with the stethoscope, the one who gave the injections, the one in charge.”
Patricia Bath On Being The First Person To Invent & Demonstrate Laserphaco Cataract Surgery | TIMECreditCreditVideo by TIME
 
Dr. Bath as a 17-year-old high school student in New York City in 1960. She was featured in The New York Times, along with another teenager, after a cancer study they had helped write was presented in Washington.CreditHerbert S. Sonnenfeld

She was a top student at Charles Evans Hughes High School in Manhattan, now closed, and at 17 she was featured in The New York Times along with another teenager, Arnold Lentnek, after a cancer study they had helped write was presented at the International Congress on Nutrition in Washington.
She studied chemistry and physics at Hunter College in Manhattan, earning a bachelor’s degree there in 1964, and received her medical degree at Howard University in Washington in 1968. She then returned to New York to do an internship at Harlem Hospital and a fellowship at Columbia, setting the stage for her insights into the racial disparities in statistics on blindness and her proposals for community ophthalmology.
“Disproportionate numbers of blacks are blinded by preventable causes,” Dr. Bath wrote in a 1979 paper in the Journal of the National Medical Association. “However, thus far, no national strategies exist for reducing the excessive rates of blindness among the black population.”
 
May they all Rest in Peace and Power 



 







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