Cliff Joseph
Template:TOCnestleft Cliff Joseph was one of the first African Americans to participate in the American Art Therapy Association (AATA), and to subsequently become a registered art therapist and teacher. This interview documents the life and activities of one of AATA's most dynamic activists and clinicians of the 1970s.
Cliff Joseph is an African American painter living in New York whose works have been exhibited nationally and internationally. In the 1980s he was an activist in Art Against Apartheid, was co-chair of the Black Emergency Cultural Coalition, and served as New York co-chair of Artists for Jesse Jackson.[1]
"A call to build an organization for the 1990s and beyond"
Unity, January 28 1991, issued a statement "A call to build an organization for the 1990s and beyond" on pages 4 to 6.
This group was a split in the League of Revolutionary Struggle which soon became the Unity Organizing Committee.
Those listed as supporters of the call included Cliff Joseph, artist and psychotherapist New York.
Forward
Peter Shapiro, Richard Fleming, Cliff Joseph, Amanda Kemp and Peter Saltzman were contributors to Forward Spring/Summer 1989 - theoretical journal of the League of Revolutionary Struggle..
References
- ↑ Forward, Vol 9 No 1 1989]