
Prior to joining the CDR staff, Ms. Ross was Program Director
for the National Black Women’s Health Project, and
Director of Women of Color programs for the National Orga-
-
ican women to direct a rape crisis center in the 1970s, she or-
World Women in 1980, and in 1987 she organized a national
conference on Women of Color and Reproductive Rights. As
black women to win a suit in 1976 against A.H. Robins, manufacturer
of the Dalkon Shield which sterilized her at age 23.
She organized women of color delegations for the massive
pro-choice marches sponsored by NOW in 1986 and 1989. In
American women for reproductive rights for the National
Black Women’s Health Project. She also served eight years
on the D.C. Commission for Women, and has appeared on
numerous national talk shows and is also an editorial writer
on political affairs and a political analyst.
Ms. Ross currently serves on the boards of directors of the
Radio Foundation, the Independent Commission for Human
Rights Education, Students Organizing Students, Sisterlove
Women’s AIDS Project, the Center for Campus Organizing,
and Men Stopping Violence.
Contemporary artist Carrie Mae
Weems produced a series of photographic
portraits of African-American
children and called it Colored People.
A New York Times review of an exhibit
of her work described how she
“tinted the prints with monochromatic
dyes: yellow, blue, magenta. The results
were beautiful ... but the colors
carried complex messages. They are
reminders that the range of skin colors
covered by ‘black’ is vast.”
Carrie Mae Weems
Steeped in African- American history, Carrie Mae
Weems’s works explore issues of race, class, and
gender identity. Primarily working in photography
and video, but also exploring everything
from verse to performance, Weems h a s
said that regardless of medium, activism
is a central concern of her prac-
as a way of better understanding the
present. “Photography can be used as
a powerful weapon toward instituting
political and cultural change,” she has
said. “I for one will continue to work
toward this end.” She rose to prominence
with her “Kitchen Table Series”
in the early 1990s, whose photographs
depict the artist seated at her kitchen
table and examine various tropes and
stereotypes of African-American life.
Most recently, her achievements were
recognized with a “genius grant” from
the MacArthur Foundation.
FLORIDA WOMEN MAGAZINE 813.682.9364 FEB/MAR 2019 • 21