In Une ligue d’un: Black Testament


Une ligue d’un: Black Testament
The Catacombs
May 5, 2023, to June 3, 2023

Renée Baker


In Une ligue d’un: Black Testament, composer, music director, and artist Renée Baker showcases a surrealist view of the possibilities of black artistry. 

This exhibition Une ligue d’un, which translates to “a league of one,” includes large paintings on paper, sculptures, and an experimental film that create unexpected and dramatic entries into the audio-visual arena. Having created a system of visualizing and interpreting musical information and scores, a system she calls CCL (Cipher Conduit Linguistics), there is no distinguishable decision between her visual and audio worlds. This technique uses semantic concepts and gestures of composition to influence the perception of an image as not just an image, but as partner to the chosen score sounds.

Baker’s devotion to recontextualizing boundaries within her work also contains a twist of social détournement, as she addresses the often less-than-honest portrayal of people, especially the lives of African Americans in the 1900s. Listening to and seeing new soundscapes gives the audience a different way to view “otherness,” enacting a form of social justice without overt protest and presenting positive narratives of cultural life without changing a frame.

Her unique juxtaposition of styles, rhythms, and moods creates new meanings in the listeners' relationship with sound art. Reinterpreting, reevaluating, and reimagining the merging of images and sound brings another level of analysis and appreciation. Nothing is easily packaged. Subtle ruptures between imagery and sound achieve an edge of experimentation that drives the images towards a narrative not controlled by either the viewer or the creator. Her intent is to convince the viewer’s mind to marry the two elements and encourage a flow that at first glance appears mismatched but that ultimately creates a comfortable dissonance that allows the viewer to take their interpretation to a new “anywhere” without losing sight of the historical sources that interrogate what lies beneath.



About Renée Baker


Renée Baker is a visual artist, film artist, composer, and recontextualist. She is the founding music director and conductor of the internationally acclaimed Chicago Modern Orchestra Project (CMOP). This polystylistic orchestral organization grew from the plums of classical music and jazz. A member of the world-renowned collective Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), Baker has received critical acclaim for her graphic score novels from performances in Berlin, Poland, London, Scotland, and as far-reaching as Vietnam.

Baker developed the Mantra Blue Free Orchestra (Chicago), PEK’ Contemporary Project (Berlin), and Twilight Struggles (Berlin) as well as being involved in over 20 cutting-edge new music ensembles. Baker was Principal Violist for 24 years of the acclaimed Chicago Sinfonietta. Her conducting language, CCL (Cipher Conduit Linguistics), is an advocate language for linguistic autonomy in sonic graphic scoring. She has composed over 2000 traditionally notated contemporary classical works for ensembles and has written scores for over 220 silent films, as well as crafted 100+ of her own experimental films. Her ability to embrace traditional compositions as well as various creative parameters in her work has led to commissions from the Chicago Sinfonietta, Berlin International Brass, PEK’ Contemporary Project, Joffrey Ballet Chamber Series, Shedd Aquarium, Adler Planetarium, among many others, and she serves as an Artistic Consultant for many classically oriented organizations.


CHARLES GAINES MOVING CHAINS: TOWARD ABOLITION SYMPOSIUM EVENT

"Art is Business"


CHARLES GAINES MOVING CHAINS: TOWARD ABOLITION SYMPOSIUM EVENT
Building upon Charles Gaines’s mon­u­men­tal work Mov­ing Chains on Gov­er­nors Island, Cre­ative Time and Gov­er­nors Island Arts present a day-long pub­lic pro­gram on Gov­er­nors Island on May 20th from 10 AM to 5PM. The Island will bring togeth­er an inter­dis­ci­pli­nary group of artists, schol­ars, and edu­ca­tors work­ing on strate­gies for abo­li­tion in art, law, edu­ca­tion, and polit­i­cal action. This event is free with reg­is­tra­tion. View the event schedule and register here→


On the occasion of Charles Gaines’s monumental public artwork Moving Chains, Creative Time and Governors Island Arts present a day-long public program on Governors Island bringing together an interdisciplinary group of artists, scholars, and educators working on strategies for abolition in art, law, education, and political action.




The day’s workshops, talks, presentations, and walking tour center on the possibilities and limitations of achieving abolition through the law. The contested, moving, and blurred lines between people and property persists today as one of the foundations of racial capitalism, the economic and structural afterlife of chattel slavery. As scholar, and panelist, Saidiya Hartman argues, while discussing the specters of freedom, the political and legal structure of liberty is a permutation of slavery—freedom can never be possessed, only shared. Moving Chains: Toward Abolition offers an opportunity to consider how freedom can be defined outside of the contours of property, considers past examples of movements using the law in the fight for freedom, and ultimately asks whether abolition and the law are compatible or not.

Organized by Diya Vij, Curator at Creative Time, and Che Gossett, scholar of abolition and contemporary Black art, for the session panels; and artist and educator Tiffany Lenoi Jones, for the drop-in workshops.

All events are free and open to the public. Capacity is limited, please register for each of the day’s events you plan to attend in advance. See ferry schedule to plan your trip on and off the island: https://www.govisland.com/plan-your-visit/ferry

11AM-1PM: MORNING SESSION

CASTLE WILLIAMS

Grounding and Land Acknowledgement by Black Gotham Experience

Presentation by Tali Keren and Alex Strada, 28th Amendment Project

Abolition and the Law, Panelists: American Artist, Kameelah Janan Rasheed, and Albert Fox Cahn, moderated by Che Gossett

The panel “Abolition and the Law” brings together artists American Artist and Keemalah Janan Rasheed in conversation with lawyer Albert Fox Cahn, Founder and Executive Director of Surveillance Oversight Technology Project (S.T.O.P.), moderated by Che Gossett. Together, the panelists will discuss the intersection of art, law, surveillance, and abolition. How do redaction, bracketing, and constraint exist within the context of surveillance and the legal system? How might art become a vehicle for exposing, negotiating, and moving past the structure of the law and towards new possibilities for abolition?

Presentation by Sarah Abdelaziz, Executive Director, Abolitionist Teaching Network

1-2PM: LUNCH BREAK

COLONELS ROW

Visit a selection of food trucks at Colonels Row outside the event or other Governors Island dining spots to purchase lunch. Guests are also welcome to pack their own lunch.

Black Gotham Experience Lunch Circle: Join Kamau Ware for a talk back on the history and ideas covered in the morning session.

28th Amendment Soap Box Installation: Visitors are invited to engage by listening to these sonic sculptures that build upon the history of soap boxes as sites of collective struggle and record their own additions to this work.

12-3PM: DROP-IN WORKSHOPS

COLONELS ROW

Drop into multigenerational artmaking workshops and gatherings to collectively imagine freedom while learning about the possibility, necessity, and stakes of teaching abolition today. This program is organized by Tiffany Lenoi Jones with Akiea “Ki” Gross and Noor Jones-Bey, grantees of the Abolitionist Teaching Network.

2-5PM: AFTERNOON SESSION

CASTLE WILLIAMS

Presentation by artist Russell Craig, Right of Return

Architectures of Freedom, Panelists: Torkwase Dyson, Saidiya Hartman, and Rinaldo Walcott

Scholars Saidiya Hartman and Rinaldo Walcott will think alongside and in concert with artist Torkwase Dyson about how freedom might be actualized and spatialized, the places freedom inhabits and takes. What are the architectures and infrastructures of freedom? How might freedom be shared, rather than monetized, privatized and racialized as property? What is the role of art in making freedom(s) possible in the midst of slavery’s global social and aesthetic afterlives?

In Conversation: Charles Gaines and Christina Sharpe

Join artist Charles Gaines and scholar Christina Sharpe in an intimate conversation on Gaines’s monumental work Moving Chains through the lens of Sharpe’s groundbreaking framework of “Wake Work,” introduced in her influential book, In the Wake: On Blackness and Being (Duke University Press, 2016). The two will discuss aesthetic strategies to address race and power in order to reorient our ways of seeing and being and doing in the wake of slavery and the United States project.

5:00 & 5:30PM: Governors Island ferries depart for Manhattan

6:00PM: Last ferry to Manhattan departs

EARTH DAY CELEBRATION AND KICK OFF OF THE FLORIN ROAD COMMUNITY BEAUTIFICATION PROJECT

"Art is Business" https://www.florinroadcommunitybeautificationproject.org/


 “The Florin corridor is one of our City’s hidden gems, and I’m incredibly excited to see this continued investment in South Sacramento. In cooperation with community institutions like the Sojourner Truth Museum, Florin Square, and the Florin Road Partnership, we’re proud to continue building a vibrant, resilient, and authentic community through strong workforce programs, community events, and supporting our local businesses.”

The City of Sacramento is inviting Sacramentans to the Florin Road Community Beautification Project kick-off on April 8 in South Sacramento (2251 Florin Road).
The event, which runs from noon to 6 p.m., will include a community paint day with artists, music, food, informational booths, and educational games.

The beautification project is funded with a $1.2 million CalTrans Clean California grant. The project will improve a stretch of Florin Road from Tamoshanter Way to Franklin Boulevard through public art, beautification efforts, public outreach, and youth engagement.

“We want this stretch of Florin Road to reflect the vibrancy of the community it houses,” said the City’s Office of Arts and Culture Program Coordinator, April Breis. 

“We’re excited to celebrate the start of this large project and look forward to involving the community throughout the process.”
The event is free, and people can register for it here. It is hosted by the Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum in partnership with the City of Sacramento Office of Arts + Culture and Department of Utilities, Florin Road Partnership, Florin Square Community Development Corporation, and SMUD.
The project will have more events, including a large public art installation.







IN MEMORIAM: JIM PRIGOFF 1927 – 2021

"Art is Business" https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/01/arts/james-prigoff-dead.html
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I met Jim Prigoff in 1992, he presented for our Mural Summit when I contracted for the Sacramento Metropolitan Arts Commission in Sacramento California, he also presented during the African American Art Summit, held in Sacramento, and San Jose California presenteed by the Visual Arts Development Project, and Celebration Arts Visual Arts Program. With much respect, he goes down in history for his documentation and for creating a legacy for muralists that reached international acclaim.  I always say he opened doors for me when I left Sacramento for Chicago by sending me a letter of introduction to the Chicago Public Art Group in 1999, where I became their program manager in 2000.  Alpha Bruton


Brooklyn-Street-Art-Bio-photo-Jim-Prigoff-250-1



BEYOND THE STREETS New York, 2019. Photo by Desdemona Dallas.

Jim Prigoff assembled one of the most extensive bodies of photo documentation of the global mural movement beginning in the 1970s. By the 1980s, he was photographing graffiti and co-produced the book Spraycan Art with friend Henry Chalfant in 1987, now considered a classic tome of modern graffiti. In addition, he has contributed to numerous books and projects and continues to lecture as a historian on public murals, graffiti, and spray can art. 



By Neil Genzlinger
Published May 1, 2021
Updated May 5, 2021
James Prigoff, who, after beginning his career in business, turned his attention to photography, documenting public murals and street art in thousands of pictures taken all over the world and helping to legitimize works once dismissed as vandalism, died on April 21 at his home in Sacramento, Calif. He was 93.

His granddaughter Perri Prigoff confirmed his death.

Mr. Prigoff was the author, with Henry Chalfant, of "Spraycan Art" (1987), a foundational book in the street-art field that featured more than 200 photographs of colorful, intricate artworks in rail tunnels, on buildings, and elsewhere — not only in New York, then considered by many to be the epicenter of graffiti art, but also in Chicago, Los Angeles, Barcelona, London, Vienna, and other cities. It included interviews with many artists and even captured some of them in creating their work.

The book sold hundreds of thousands of copies. However, Mr. Chalfant, in a phone interview, said a British newspaper had also given it a less financially rewarding distinction: It said "Spraycan Art" was the second-most-stolen book in London. (The most stolen book, Mr. Chalfant noted, was the similar "Subway Art," which he and Martha Cooper had published three years earlier.)

Image
“ Spraycan Art,” written by Mr. Prigoff and Henry Chalfant and published in 1987, was a foundational book in the street-art field.
"Spraycan Art," written by Mr. Prigoff and Henry Chalfant and published in 1987, was a foundational book in street art.

"Spraycan Art" came out when street art had grown relatively sophisticated, but the artists who made it were still regarded by many as mere vandals. Mr. Prigoff, in subsequent books and in the talks he gave, argued otherwise.

"'Vandalism' may be a matter of point of view, but it is clearly art," he told The Press-Telegram of Long Beach, Calif., in 2007. "Museums and collectors buy it, corporations co-opt it, and it matches all the dictionary definitions of art."

Those who dismiss street art, he contended, are missing its significance. That was certainly the case for the long-marginalized Black artists he and Robin J. Dunitz documented in the book "Walls of Heritage, Walls of Pride: African American Murals" (2000).

"Given limited access to the more formal art venues," Mr. Prigoff wrote in the preface, "African-American artists chose the streets and other public places to create images that challenged negative messages."

In a 1993 talk in Vancouver, British Columbia, he decried a double standard in cities that continued to conduct a war on graffiti while allowing billboards for Camel cigarettes with their images of Joe Camel.

"You tell me what's uglier," he challenged the audience, "a wall of spray-can art or the cartoon character with the phallic face?"

James Burton Prigoff was born on October 29, 1927, in Queens. His father, Harold, was a mechanical engineer, and his mother, Fannie Bassin Prigoff, was a homemaker who the family said graduated from Syracuse Law School.

Mr. Prigoff grew up in New Rochelle, N.Y., and graduated from New Rochelle High School at 16. He studied industrial engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduating in 1947. Among the positions, he held in the business world were division president at Levi Strauss and senior vice president of the Sara Lee Corporation in Chicago.

He first made headlines not for his photography but for his squash playing: "Prigoff Triumphs in Squash Tennis; Beats Bacallao to Win 6th U.S. Title in 8 Years," read one in The New York Times in April 1967.

Mr. Prigoff said that his interest in street art and public murals was piqued in the mid-1970s when he attended a lecture by Victor A. Sorell, an art historian who had been documenting the work of Hispanic street artists in Chicago.

"I quickly found that documenting murals satisfied three interests that strongly motivated me," he wrote in the preface to "Walls of Heritage." "I enjoyed photography, respected the community aspect of public art, and had a strong concern for social and political justice — often the subject of street art."

He retired from the business world in 1987 and, two years later, settled in Sacramento. However, he continued to pursue his passion for photographing public murals of all kinds, sanctioned and otherwise.

"Sometimes it takes a book to help us 'see' the artistic merit of places we drive or walk by daily," Patricia Holt wrote in 1997 in The San Francisco Chronicle, reviewing "Painting the Towns: Murals of California," an earlier Prigoff-Dunitz collaboration.

Mr. Prigoff, who also photographed archaeological sites, view street art as part of a long historical chain.

"Go back thousands of years," he told The San Diego Union-Tribune in 1995. "People have written their names in the damnedest places for so long."

One of his favorite cities for mural hunting was Philadelphia, and in 2015 he lent 1,500 images he had taken there to Mural Arts Philadelphia, where Steve Weinik, the digital archivist, has been working to create an archive of them.

"Jim was early to recognize that graffiti is both legitimate art and ephemeral," Mr. Weinik said by email. "He understood that the photograph was the record and worked to document graffiti and murals at a time when virtually no one else recognized these things. His photography and his push to share it with the world helped preserve and validate the work."

Mr. Prigoff loved to travel, and he took pictures everywhere he went. But, unfortunately, one seemingly harmless shot landed him in hot water and a civil suit against the U.S. Department of Justice. In 2004 he was near Boston and took a photo of the so-called Rainbow Swash, a colorfully painted gas storage tank.

"Private security guards filed a suspicious activity report on Mr. Prigoff simply because he photographed public art on a natural gas storage tank in the Boston area," Hugh Handeyside, senior staff attorney for the National Security Project of the American Civil Liberties Union, said by email, "and F.B.I. agents later visited him at his home in Sacramento and questioned his neighbors about him."

Mr. Prigoff, who became one of several plaintiffs in a 2014 lawsuit against the Justice Department, contends that, in its zeal after the attacks of September 11, 2001, the government was overreaching in its definition of "suspicious activity." The suit, Mr. Handeyside said, ultimately failed to change policy, but Mr. Prigoff thought the issue was important.

"I lived through the McCarthy era," he wrote of the incident, "so I know how false accusations, surveillance, and keeping files on innocent people can destroy their careers and lives."

Mr. Prigoff's wife of 72 years, Arline Wyner Prigoff, died in 2018. He is survived by two sons, Wayne and Bruce; two daughters, Lynn Lidstone, and Gail Nickerson; 11 grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren.

Mr. Chalfant said that Mr. Prigoff had just recently sent him images that he had shot of Sacramento during the coronavirus pandemic.

"He took pictures all around the city," Mr. Chalfant said, "of the emptiness of it."

Neil Genzlinger is a writer for the Obituaries Desk. Previously he was a television, film, and theater critic. @genznyt • Facebook

A version of this article appears in print on May 6, 2021, Section A, Page 26 of the New York edition with the headline: James Prigoff, 93, Dies; Photographer Had Zeal For 

 

Magnifying a Positive Attitude to Help You and Your Organization Survive/Thrive

"Art is Business"
Magnifying a Positive Attitude to Help You and Your Organization Survive/Thrive

Photo:©Lisa Gaines McDonald


Lisa Gaines

What is a ‘positive attitude’?
  1. Positive attitude is a state of mind that envisions and expects favorable results.
  2. It is the willingness to try doing new things.
  3. The belief that everything would turn all right.
  4. It is an attitude that helps you see the good in people.
  5. It is a mental attitude that sees your life's good and accomplishments rather than the negative and the failures.
  6. A positive attitude is a mindset that helps you see and recognize opportunities.
  7. Positive attitude means positive thinking.
  8. Optimism and maintaining a positive mindset.
  9. A mental attitude that focuses on the bright side of life.
  10. A mindset that uses the words “I can” and “it is possible.”
Are you a vulture or a butterfly?  


Black History Month: Gallery Guichard brings art from across the globe


Feb 6, 2023
CBS 2's Mugo Odigwe takes us to Chicago's famed Bronzeville neighborhood, where a husband and wife are taking their message of understanding and inclusion worldwide.
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Studio 300 Interview - Renee Baker- From the Archives

Reposted: Join Fountaindale Public Library Studio 300's Justin Clash

149 views  Dec 26, 2019
Join Fountaindale Public Library Studio 300's Justin Clash as he sits down with music industry professional and local resident Renee Baker for an in-depth conversation about her professional experiences in the music industry. This interview follows a series of programs held in 2019 at Fountaindale Public Library's Studio 300 as part of their annual music business month.

Renee is a composer and violinist and the founding director of the Chicago Modern Orchestra Project. She's earned critical acclaim for her symphonies, chamber ensembles, ballets, operas, and innovative film scores.
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The Fountaindale Public Library District inspires the community through education, enrichment, and discovery.

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Visit our website: http://fountaindale.org/

Black History / My History Curated by Fran Joy

"Art is Business"



OBSERVER 2022 Person of The Year: Shonna McDaniel's

"Art is Business" Sacramento Observer, reposted  by Alpha Bruton, Article by GENOA BARROW December 23, 2022



Shonna McDaniel's spent a lot of time lying down this year. The local artist slipped from a ladder while working on a community mural project and broke her foot.

As a person who is constantly on the go and doing something, usually for other people, being unable to move pained her as much as the injury itself; the initial injury turned into others, and she also developed life-threatening blood clots from being prone for an extended period.

McDaniels doesn't know how to sit still, yet it wasn't idle time when she was forced to. The artist's hands – and mind – were constantly working. Bedridden for five months, she discovered new ways to create and, while recuperating, organized art shows and youth art activities.

McDaniels' unapologetic work in showing the beauty of Black people and their contributions and her continued commitment to seeing Black artists have a seat at the table led to her selection by The OBSERVER as its 2022 Person of the Year.

Before her injury, McDaniels could be found running the Sojourner Truth African Heritage Museum in her beloved South Sacramento. She founded the museum in 1996 and has expanded it from a one-room space to a must-see cultural destination.
Local artist and museum founder Shonna McDaniel's has made a conscious effort to paint her people, educate the community and create opportunities for others to shine. Verbal Adam, OBSERVER
"We want to have information on great African kings and queens and individuals that they don't speak of when they talk about art history, that they are too afraid to speak of when they talk about our history," McDaniel says of the space.
Solo Exhibition Yolo Arts' Gallery 625, 2023

Visitors often encountered her going seemingly 100 mph, urging them to discover all the museum offers and pointing them to other activities throughout the building. She's still going full speed, only these days, it's in a wheelchair or a motorized scooter donated by a community supporter.

The museum is located inside the Florin Square complex. McDaniels' roots in the space date back 30 years to when she worked for Barbara Nord, the first Black woman to own a payee service in Sacramento. The building was known as the Business Incubator at the time. It's now home to several Black-owned small businesses and the African Market Place, which takes place every first and third Saturday. McDaniels also organizes Second Saturday activities to include Blacks in activities that expose people to art and culture as they do in other parts of the city.




"We need that for South Sacramento," she says. 

African Market Place leader Ra West hosted an art exhibit featuring McDaniel's during Second Saturday earlier this month. West says the spotlight was long overdue, as McDaniel's usually is uplifting other people's work.


Black Like Me
Where others see a blank canvas, McDaniels sees possibilities. When she sees voids, she seeks to fill them. When others push back against her desire to see people of color depicted in public spaces, she just paints them with bolder strokes.

She focuses much of her artistic energy on painting Black women in all their melanated glory. Former mentor Akinsanya Kambon says that's a skill in itself.

"You can't just make Black skin by using one color," says Kambon, who first taught McDaniels at the tender age of 4.

"Black skin has all the colors in it, and I see Shonna is doing that," he says. "You have to use reds and blues and greens, and purples, and yellows; all those colors come from the sun, and the sun reflects off the melanin in the skin.


"The first thing in being an artist is you've got to learn how to see. The average person doesn't know how to see those things, but when you study them, you learn how to see and paint them. But it's not easy. So when somebody does what Shonna's doing, you can see that they put in a lot of work studying those skin tones or skin colors."

McDaniels' work has been featured in the recurring "The Black Woman Is God" exhibit at the SOMA Arts Culture Center in San Francisco. Co-curator Karen Seneferu says that as an artist, McDaniels embodies what "The Black Woman Is God" is about.
The Black Woman is God: Reclaim, Reconfigure, Re-Remember 
Curated by Karen Seneferu and Melorra Green


"Shonna McDaniels is an unsung heroine," says a fellow artist. "Like the exhibit, Shonna's art celebrates Black women as essential to building a more just society. Shonna McDaniels creates spaces that are sustainable for the community's future.

“When she produces art, she expands the intersectionality of race, age and gender, dismantling stereotypes of Black women.”

McDaniels has taught art classes and conducted numerous workshops and exhibits. She has also been involved in such collaborations as the Visual Arts Development Project, Zica Creative Arts and Literary Guild, Kuumba Collective, and the Sacramento African American Nonprofit Coalition. She also advocates for Black inclusion in public art projects such as Wide Open Walls.

"Shonna is pure light and love in action," says Sandy Holman, founder of the Davis nonprofit The Culture C.O.-O.P.

Holman met McDaniel's at the African Market Place and says her life is better for it.

"She is fearless, committed, and talented beyond measure, but I love her most for what she does for our community and her zeal to give back," Holman says.

'Woke' Walls 
"Woke" is a reasonably contemporary term, but McDaniel's says she always has been that way. She participated in her first Kwanzaa at age 5 and attended an African-centered Saturday school where she learned Swahili and was immersed in the culture.

She credits her mother, Ollie Armstrong McDaniel's, who helps run the museum, for laying the foundation early.

"We had African masks, paintings, and images of Black people throughout the house," McDaniels says. "She was a part of the Black Panther movement. We would go to Oakland to participate in the marches and other activities, so she stimulated our minds."

McDaniels' father, William McDaniels, spent time behind bars and was changed by the experience. He passed on that knowledge to his children.

"When he got into prison, he started to cultivate his Black mind, and he started sharing that information with us as young people," she says. "He started writing letters to me as a young child and sharing information about historical Black leaders. I'm getting letters with all these powerful history lessons in them."

Her mother joined the Nation of Islam and exposed her children to its ideology and self-sufficiency message. Both have influenced her art and community-focused activism.

"I definitely was inspired by the fact that the Nation had an entire block of businesses in Oak Park," McDaniels says. "It was like a Black Wall Street. I had never seen anything like it before."

Today's kids need similar exposure, she says.

"My mom involved us in everything that she could possibly imagine that would cultivate our Black minds, and a lot of the parents are not doing that. That's one of the biggest mistakes happening today for our youth. Of course, we know they're not getting that information in school."

While educators were being damned nationally for teaching the realities of American history, McDaniels was educating local youth about their place in it through a docent program at the museum that gives them money for their pockets as well. While school districts across the country added classical Black titles to their lists of banned books, McDaniels was introducing youth to Black authors on the walls of her museum and supporting the local business, Escape Velocity's Boys in The Hood Book Club, a literacy program.

For McDaniels, who hosts a Black memorabilia fest and the annual Festival of Black Women's Hair, Body, Mental/Financial Health, Beauty, and Art, it nearly broke her heart to hear a local teen say she "didn't know anything about being Black until the George Floyd incident." Also troubling, she says, are upper-middle-class parents and celebrities with far-reaching platforms, who shy away from their Blackness and denounce the importance of young people knowing about their culture and their past.

"What our community does not understand is that our children are out here acting foolish and running amok, and it is because they don't have a knowledge of self," she says. "If they had a knowledge of self and loved self, that would allow them to love others in their space. If they knew that they come from greatness, they wouldn't be out here calling each other the n-word and the b-word; they would be on a whole other level of consciousness."



'This Work Is A Part Of My Soul'
During the pandemic, McDaniels and the Sojourner Truth Museum have minded the gaps for the community, hosting senior activities, providing weekly meals, and hosting youth pop-up events and art lessons, complete with supplies. Some events were covered by city COVID-19 money, but McDaniels continued the activities even after the funds stopped this year.

"This work is a part of my soul," McDaniels says. "It's my life's work, and I want parents to get it. I want our children to get it; I want them to succeed. I want them to love each other. It doesn't matter if the funding is not there. Like Malcolm said, 'By any means necessary.' So, if I have to come out of my own pocket, which I still do in the past and sometimes today. I've always had that mindset. I'll go without to make sure that my community has."


"I've seen her develop as one of the most accomplished artists in Sacramento, in terms of African Americans," he says.

Born Mark Teemer, Akinsanya Kambon is an American artist and art professor.

Kambon is also happy she has stayed true to her activist roots.

"We as artists have a responsibility to speak to our people's struggle in this country because that's why our ancestors gave us this talent. They gave it to us so we can carry on the fight. We have to intensify the struggle," Kambon says.

Supporters often caution McDaniels that she's "doing too much," but those words aren't in her vocabulary. She's already focused on 2023 and getting an early start on securing funding for her annual Banana Festival, a significant museum fundraiser.

"A lot of people tell me, 'You're going to kill yourself trying to save your people,' 'You're going to make yourself sick,' or 'You have made yourself sick,'" she says. "It's just embedded in me to continue to do this work, and hopefully, before I transition, some major change will be made."

THE OBSERVER proudly salutes Shonna McDaniel's as its 2022 Person of the Year.

AAAM & Artwork Archive: How Digital Tools Activate, Preserve, & Promote ...

Presentation by Artist Artlisia Bibbs on Popup Research Station CAFE

"Art is Business" http://www.bibbsfineart.com/.


My Background
 Visual artist, Artlisia Bibbs, captures life's journey through bold, colorful expression.

Her Dadaism, Pop Art, and Figurative Art style involve creating "from the heart," letting her present moment of awareness form the process of creation.   

Artlisia is a native of Mississippi but has been proud to call our Nation's Capital, the metropolitan Washington DC area, home for the past 30 years. Surrounded by creative influences throughout her life, her mother, a crafter and artist, exposed her to the arts and creativity at a very young age.

Artlisia is a self-taught collage artist, painter, and sculptor who regularly creates privately commissioned color and theme-inspired works of art for clients like The Links, Inc.; Ingram Design Group; Michelle Bailey of Black Entertainment Television; John Houston of Whitney Houston Entertainment, and many others.

                                           My Inspiration

   Dadaism is my current inspiration. Dadaism is an art movement of the European avant-garde in the early 20th century, with early centers in Zürich, Switzerland, at the Cabaret Voltaire (c. 1916). Dada emerged on the New York art scene around 1915 and flourished in Paris during the 1920s. Dadaist activities lasted until the mid-1920s. 

Dadaism developed in reaction to World War I; the Dada movement consisted of artists who rejected modern capitalist society's logic, reason, and aestheticism, instead expressing nonsense, irrationality, and anti-bourgeois protest in their works. The art of the movement spanned visual, literary, and sound media, including collage, sound poetry, cut-up writing, and sculpture. In addition, dadaist artists expressed discontent toward violence, war, and nationalism and maintained political affinities with radical left-wing and far-left politics. 

Artists are the storytellers of their time. In this time of Post Trump, January 6th Commissions, and the overthrow of Roe vs. Wade, Dadaism inspired me to think outside the box in style and to keep a sense of humor during these very dark times in American history. I hope you enjoy each image as much as I enjoyed creating them. I laughed a lot. Enjoy...



A LOOK TO THE FUTURE
August 29, 2022, |Art and Activism

The Black Woman Experience Solo Exhibition of Shonna McDaniels

"Art is Business"



Phantom Gallery CHI

Village of Hazel Crest Open Lands "Arts in the Woods" Soundscape- Reggie Nicholson Concepts

On August 9, 2025, the Village of Hazel Crest will host a Moonlight Social at the Open Lands Arboretum, featuring a community listening sess...