Cover art for My Tongue has No Bone, by J. Otis Powell‽ (Porter Publishing, 2001).

My Tongue has No Bone

Cover art for My Tongue has No Bone, by J. Otis Powell‽ (Porter Publishing, 2001).

Powell‽, J. Otis (1955–2017)

James Otis Powell (a.k.a. J. Otis Powell‽) was an influential Minnesota-based American spoken word poet. He was the founding producer of the award-winning Write On Radio! show at KFAI-FM in Minneapolis, an advisor for the Minnesota Spoken Word Association, a curator for Intermedia Arts, and a program director for the Loft Literary Center. He was also the recipient of numerous awards, including the Loft Creative Nonfiction Award, Jerome Foundation mid-career-artists grants, a Jerome Foundation travel-and-study grant, the Intermedia Arts Interdisciplinary McKnight fellowship, and the 2017 Sally Award at the Ordway Theater. The MN Spoken Word Association awarded Powell‽ its Urban Griot Innovator Award and inducted him into the MN Spoken Word Association Hall of Fame in 2009.

Cabinet photograph of two male musicians, ca. 1905. Photo by Shepherd Photo Company.

Two musicians

Cabinet photograph of two male musicians, ca. 1905. Photo by Shepherd Photo Company.

Group photograph of the Minnesota state legislature, 1903. Photo by Harry Shepherd.

The Minnesota state legislature of 1903.

Group photograph of the Minnesota state legislature, 1903. Photo by Harry Shepherd.

Harry Shepherd, 1900. Photo from The Appeal, February 3, 1900.

Harry Shepherd

Harry Shepherd, 1900. Photo from The Appeal, February 3, 1900.

“Exhibit of the American Negroes at the Paris Exposition.” From the American Monthly Review of Reviews XXII, no. 130 (November 1900): 576.

Exhibit of photography by African American photographers at the 1900 Paris Exposition

“Exhibit of the American Negroes at the Paris Exposition.” From the American Monthly Review of Reviews XXII, no. 130 (November 1900): 576.

Mary E. Schwandt Schmidt (Mrs. William) and Snana Good Thunder (Maggie Brass), 1899. Photo by Shepherd Photo Studio.

Snana Good Thunder (Maggie Brass) and Mary E. Schwandt Schmidt

Snana Good Thunder (Maggie Brass, left) and Mary E. Schwandt Schmidt (Mrs. William, right), 1899. Photo by Shepherd Photo Studio.

Advertisement for Harry Shepherd’s Elite Studio, located at 15 East Seventh Street in St. Paul, 1891. From the Appeal, December 19, 1891.

Advertisement for Harry Shepherd’s Elite Studio

Advertisement for Harry Shepherd’s Elite Studio, located at 15 East Seventh Street in St. Paul, 1891. From the Appeal, December 19, 1891.

Harry Shepherd, 1906. Photo from the Appeal, August 18, 1906.

Harry Shepherd

Harry Shepherd, 1906. Photo from the Appeal, August 18, 1906.

Shepherd, Harry (ca. 1854–?)

Harry Shepherd, an African American photographer who lived and worked in St. Paul between 1880 and 1905, became one of the most successful photographers in the city. Shepherd’s work earned awards and an opportunity to provide photographs for the American Negro Exhibit at the 1900 Paris Exposition. Politically active, he took part in the National Afro-American Council (NAAC), and ran for Fourth Ward alderman in 1902.

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