Writing and speaking Olufemi has written and spoken on a range of topics including: art and culture; feminism, gender and sexism (including the
Women's Strike and
Time's Up movements); food equality;
climate justice and race; race and racism, including archives of radical Black British activism; and higher education issues, including institutional justice and sexual harassment in universities, and decolonising practices in higher education (for which she was targeted with a "vicious and misleading" sexist and racist harassment by British right-wing press). Poet
Jay Bernard interviewed Olufemi for
Housmans Bookshop, and the pair discussed the "
internationalist ethos of black feminist movements in the 70s and 80s", connecting feminist struggles such as protests against sexual violence with opposition to
settler colonialism. Olufemi with
Che Gossett and Sarah Shin organised a month-long programme of talks and events under the title "Revolution is not a one-time event" in summer 2020. The launch event, hosted by Silver Press on 9 June 2020, took the form of a fundraiser for Black liberation. The fundraiser was hosted by Akwugo Emejulu and featured Che Gossett, Helena Rubinstein, Ru Kaur, Olufemi and
Amrit Wilson in conversation.
Art Olufemi is a member of "bare minimum", an interdisciplinary, anti-work arts collective.
Influences Olufemi cites several key
feminist, trans-inclusive,
Stella Dadzie,
Shulamith Firestone,
Silvia Federici,
Selma James, the
Young Lords, and
Sylvia Wynter. ==Bibliography==