FLUIDITY MURAL
FLUIDITY MURAL
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SUMMER OF 2021: This piece is called FLUIDITY
and it’s hella big.
Have you ever listened to the ‘slave’ narratives recorded in conjunction with the WPA project? If not, stop scrolling and listen now. The sounds of the ancestors voices recalling there experiences of basically being responsible for the physical embodiment of wealth in this nation is chilling. The most memorable part of it is that folks were in there own bodies. Meaning, I could hear who these people are, which is way more than the exploits. They/We are beautifully expansive.
It’s no coincide that I, along with my amazing collective are out here in mid 90deg weather getting eating by mosquitoes and loved up by the sun on Juneteenth. We are humbled and honored to be here.
I often think about the folks who decided to migrate to Texas to skirt emancipating Black folks. How blown outta their minds they must have been to be that outta touch. I think about the blended lineage and often ponder the ancestral stories that comes with continuing to share space with such oppressive folks. Some folks gotta learn to share and some folks gotta take up more space.
We take freedom hella seriously. Part of being free is understanding that we are all intricately connected and that comes with responsibility. It requires accountability and humility. Marginalized folks tend to do the heavy lifting in this particular understanding and that needs to change…like right now…like yesterday.
The blood that pumps through my veins is the blood of folks who originate from this land, Africa, the Caribbean, the south and even includes some colonizer juice. It has traveled continents, built nations and most incredibly it simply exists.
Today I give thanks/honor the ancestors in the best way I know… by painting us huge and glorious and black as ever. Hanging with my peeps, eating fresh food, randomly twerking, getting in some good laughs and avoiding all situations that require kissing my teeth or rolling my eyes. What ya’ll gonna do with yerselves on this glorious day?
Happy independence day aka Juneteenth.
Big up to the @seismigue team for sharing space.
SEISMIQUE ART MUSEUM
OF EXPANSION
OF EXPANSION
We made a movie…a short one…but still a movie! And it won Best Experimental film in the Imagine This Women’s Film Festival!
‘Of Expansion’ is a short film inspired by quarantine musings and art-making. Here’s the website for the film
This is a trippy studio visit follows 2 puppets through a time and space distorted art exhibition. The visit features a collection of collages, photography, banners, textile studies, and mixed media pieces exploring ‘what is the ideal scenario and how do we get there?’
Over the last year and a half the Mz.Icar collective has spent time working on studies, manifestations, and visual messages that are prayers for what we’d like to see and feel in the future. Given the intersectional history of oppression, inequity, and violence that makes up the legacy of America, It can be challenging to truly envision our society in an ideal way. This collection of work embodies a vision board that does just that. This group of work focuses on an alternative centricity, It’s a celebration of our voice, a lesson in play, and a focus in joy. It draws from the traditions of church banners, propaganda and flags as symbols of things we believe in and have cultural relevance.
Thematically this group of work is an experiment in world-building. It is set out to be a foundational vision board for what could be.
Featuring Rielle Love and digital effects by The Kinardist
SEE ME MURAL
SEE ME MURAL
Stay Up. Get right. Love up on yerself and each other.
just a lil reminder located in a city I love.
This piece came together quickly, which is usually a sign of being in flow / frequency with things/ people / energy combined. The goal is to ride that.
Thanks @at1ba for pulling this together and providing snacks. Thanks @myrtleavebklyn for your dedication to the Ave. Thank Bravo market for letting us get up on this gate and letting me go pee…bathrooms + ny + pandemics will leave alot of trees watered. Thanks all my peeps who came by and kept the hydration and vibrations up.
Enjoy!
📸 By @erinpatriceobrien
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THE VISIONARY IN YOU MURAL
THE VISIONARY IN YOU MURAL
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Let’s wrap about having work supported. It’s been an astonishing past couple of months being able to share these visions with various cities and connect with the local communities. We are feeling very supported and have alot of gratitude around that.
Scale context and content is so important in the work that we do.
Our intention with all of these murals is to create large love letters that encourage people to connect, unite, feel empowered and seen.
The way folks connect with spaces is very important. These spaces are/were designed. they are/were intentionally created for various uses and when they fall into decay ruin or abandonment it’s important that we understand that these can be repurposed. It’s also imperative to know that the same applies in our own personal communities and spaces.
We know that there is alot of BS and inequity around that. we are not blind to where we are at in the world, but we know what we want to focus on and what direction we’d like to go.
We want you to feel welcomed where you are, We want you to feel accepted seen and supported. We want to remind people to be welcoming and be supportive and to see each other. We don’t take public works lightly at all. We see them as a ever-moving evolving representation of the places and people that we are encountering.
Our latest, piece
‘Visionary in You’ was commissioned by @Doritos for there #solidblack initiative, and coordinated and installed by @pearlmedia.
2020 chestnut st. Philly
ART AUCTION
BLACK ART AUCTION
Hello, my people! So many of you have requested a way to purchase artwork. To be honest we’ve been spending so much time working on these big public pieces that we haven’t been in the studio very much building up our inventory of artwork.
We are welcoming this winter and enjoying this time to work on new pieces. In the meantime and in-between time, we have the honor of partnering with Calabar Gallery and currently have two large pieces available for auction on their platform. Both Fame and fly could be all yours. Bidding is currently open and will be until December 14th
ABOUT THE AUCTION
“Homesick Philly” Black Art Auction Curated By Chill Moody And Atim Annette Oton Is The First Auction To Celebrate Philadelphia Black Artists Whose Work Speaks To The Creative, Vibrant Stories, Street, Fashion And Visual Culture Of The City. The Auction Will Amplify And Increase Awareness Of Black Artists, Sales For These Emerging Black Artists And Expand The Number Of Buyers And Collectors For Their Work. Working With Visit Philly’s Initiative “Homesick Philly”, The Art Auction Will Be Facilitated By Calabar Gallery’s Web Platform Who Began Art Auctions In 2020 In Response To The Need For Artists To Create Income During The Pandemic. The Auction Will Begin November 29 And Run 15 Days
ROADMAP TO JOY EXHIBITION
ROADMAP TO JOY
(Philadelphia, PA – June 2021) – “Roadmap to Joy” is a public-art exhibition curated by Atiba T. Edwards and Mz. Icar Collective in partnership with The Culture Rooms, FOKUS and Arts and Crafts Holdings. This exhibition features a collection of artists answering the question of what is joy, how do we get there and what does it look like?
“Roadmap to Joy” is a multi-location public art exhibition. “Roadmap to Joy” runs through the summer of 2021 and is on display at 1004 Spring Garden St., and 1124 Spring Garden St. in the Spring Garden area of Philadelphia, PA. Featured artists include Paul Ayihawu; Sa’Diyya Dunkley; Gina Giles; Joelle St. Julien and Andre Walls.
“Joy is the journey we take – knowing, like with any road traveled there will be speedbumps, potholes and smooth roads – as well as the place we find ourselves during and at the end of each day. Joy is a combination of making peace with where and who you are and having a sense of where and who you want to be in your life. The four artists featured truly capture this and help to suggest paths to joy for all!” – Atiba
About Atiba T. Edwards
Atiba is the co-founder of FOKUS and the COO of the Brooklyn Children’s Museum. Born in St. Vincent and the Grenadines, he grew up in Brownsville and studied engineering and liberal arts at the University of Michigan.
About Mz. Icar
Mz. Icar is an anonymous interdisciplinary art collective. Their colorful mixed-media, visual narratives celebrate Women, Global Blackness, and Play.
FEATURED ARTISTS:
Andrea Walls
See Andrea’s work in person at 915 Spring Garden St (and Green St)
Gina Giles
See Gina’s work in person at 1124 Spring Garden (Ridge Street Side)
Joelle St. Julien
See Joelle’s work in person at 1124 Spring Garden (Ridge Street Side)
Paul Ayihawu
See Paul’s work in person at 1004 Spring Garden
Sa’Diyya Dunkley
See Sa’Diyya‘s work in person at 1124 Spring Garden (Ridge Street Side)
The Culture Rooms
The Culture Rooms is a multi-room experience under one roof that taps into the multiplicity and value of Black Culture today and our hopes for tomorrow. Through multi-sensory installations, performances, and workshops, we present you with a new way to connect Blackness, creativity, culture, and community.
FOKUS
FOKUS uses the arts to educate, empower and unite communities. This is accomplished through community-based events, arts education curriculum and programming, publishing INSIGHT magazine. By increasing the public's access to the arts, the importance and need of the arts is further realized and supported.
Arts + Crafts Holdings
Arts + Crafts Holdings is an active investor and the leading developer on the northern edge of Center City Philadelphia. Affiliates of Arts + Crafts Holdings currently own in excess of 2,000,000 SF of commercial, industrial & mixeduse real estate.
UNRAVELED
UNRAVELED
Super excited to announce the opening of “UNRAVELED: Confronting The Fabric of Fiber Art” Group Show @untitledspaceny this friday. This show will include a few pieces as well as an installation from our ‘Of Expansion’ Series. The following is all the info
OPENING APRIL 17TH “UNRAVELED: Confronting The Fabric of Fiber Art” Group Show @untitledspaceny ✨
✨RSVP Required ✨
The Untitled Space is pleased to present “UNRAVELED: Confronting The Fabric of Fiber Art” a group show opening on April 17th and on view through May 28th, 2021. Curated by Indira Cesarine, the exhibition will feature textile and fiber-based artworks by 40 contemporary artists. “UNRAVELED: Confronting The Fabric of Fiber Art” explores in depth the themes and techniques of the medium through the works of female-identifying artists working with natural and synthetic fiber, fabric, and yarn. The exhibition presents figurative and abstract works that address our lived experience and history through the lens of women weaving, knotting, twining, plaiting, coiling, pleating, lashing, and interlacing. Narratives of self-identification, race, religion, gender, sexuality, our shared experience, as well as protest and the patriarchy are literally “unraveled” through embroidery, felt, woven and hooked rugs, braided and sewn hair, sewn fabrics, discarded clothing, cross-stitching, repurposed materials and more.
Exhibiting Artists: Amber Doe, Carol Scavotto, Caroline Wayne, Christy O’Connor, Daniela Puliti, Delaney Conner, Dominique Vitali, Elise Drake, Elizabeth Miller, Hera Haesoo Kim, Indira Cesarine, Jamia Weir, Jody MacDonald, Julia Brandão, Kathy Sirico, Katie Cercone, Katie Commodore, Katrina Majkut, Katy Itter, Kelly Boehmer, Linda Friedman Schmidt, Lisa Federici, Marianne Fairbanks, Mary Tooley Parker, Melanie Fischer, Melissa Zexter, Mychaelyn Michalec, Mz Icar, Orly Cogan, Robin Kang, Rosemary Meza-DesPlas, Ruta Naujalyte, Sally Hewett, Sarah Blanchette, Sooo-z Mastopietro, Sophie Boggis-Rolfe, Stacy Isenbarger, Stephanie Eche, Victoria Selbach, and Winnie van der Rijn.
More info:
https://untitled-space.com/unraveled-confronting-the-fabric-of-fiber-art-group-show/
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STUDIO VISIT: MAS
MAS
My earliest memories consist of watching my grandmother, her sisters, and brothers wine to the wee hours of the morning to tiny whiny and various old school soca tunes. I often joke that soca is the techno of black music. If you want to hang at a soca jam it requires stamina. There is no standing on the walls there is no chilling off to the side. Soca envelopes you.
In 2016 I attended Trinidad’s carnival for the first time. Being of Caribbean descent, carnival, soca music, and the culture, in general, was very familiar. This trip was special because it was the first time that I experienced this culture fully embraced by society. In Toronto you have Caribana and it’s fun but the city tolerates Caribana because it brings in so much money. In New York you have the West Indian Labor Day parade and that’s a good time except for that time I almost got ran over by a cop trying to disperse crowds. New York also seems to tolerate the West Indian Day parade. But Trinidad is down for the whole thing. Municipal buildings are closed carnival in Trinidad. This is a nationwide celebration. Throughout the days leading up to the Mas, You can hear various steel pan ensembles practicing throughout Port au Spain from late at night till the early hours of the morning. You can peek into storefronts that are filled with costumes in various states of completion.
To experience that particular version of carnival was a freedom that I had never ever seen. One of the great things about it is that it’s a multi-generational event So you see your grandma, your auntie’s, the children everybody participating. The whole place shuts down just to have this release. It’s a celebration of color, movement, dancing, everything and it seems like everyone understands that this releases imperative to the workings of society.
Waiting to get through customs I conversed with a gentleman who told me he had been slowly upping his intake and alcohol so that he could be ready for the amount of fetes that he was going to have. A fetes a party, or lively gathering, for many of them the ticket price includes food and liquor. You have breakfast fetes, boat fetes, dinner fats lunch fest pre carnival fetes etc. Throughout carnival you’ll often see people with multiple plastic bracelets that act as tickets to various fetes.
Before we get into these lovely bodies and reminders of warm sunlight on our skin, let’s get into the history of the celebration. Carnival is a Christian festive season that occurs before the liturgical season of Lent.The main events typically occur during February or early March, during the period historically known as (or Pre-Lent). Carnival typically involves public celebrations, including events such as parades, public street parties and other entertainments, combining some elements of a circus. Elaborate costumes and masks allow people to set aside their everyday individuality and experience a heightened sense of social unity.Participants often indulge in excessive consumption of alcohol, meat, and other foods that will be forgone during upcoming Lent.
From an anthropological point of view, carnival is a reversal ritual, in which social roles are reversed and norms about desired behavior are suspended.
And like most things in this region of the world black folks got a hold of carnival and took it to the next level, these elaborate multi-day celebrations. They were not invited to the ceremonies of their masters and would put on their own festivals making fun of their masters and so this became a partially satirical event.
This whole experience got me really thinking about the idea of being completely free losing one’s inhibitions and being able to practice ceremony without judgment, over-policing, or unnecessary parameters. Basically, what’s it like to be free? How do we cultivate ways in which we can perpetually tap into that experience?
Years later many some of the images I shot on this experience would be used for various design projects particularly for Machell Montana’s soca volume one and soca volume two both of these design projects sit extremely dear to my heart as they depict current visual representations of us by us. They depict rarely publicly displayed cross-generational expressions of freedom and joy within blackness.
I’m reflecting on this experience in a chilly 23 degree Philadelphia artist space. I’m sharing this because in a time where it’s so challenging to gather, be around people and share this type of energy I hope these images serve as a reminder that it exists and It’s part of our narrative.
UNDERNEATH IT ALL
UNDERNEATH IT ALL
So much of Blackness is defined in opposition or relation to whiteness, after the labels, the castes, the stereotypes, and social-behavioral expectations are removed, what’s underneath? This piece explores one possibility of what’s underneath it all.
It is our very first print edition and is included in @versal_amsterdam VERSO subscription box. It is printed in an edition of 50.
This month’s theme is Redaction / Annotation, inspired by the work of Christina Sharpe; in her text In the Wake: On Blackness and Being
I will be giving away this signed artists proof to a random person who helps get the word out. Yep, a sharer gets a free signed print 🙂 Please share with your fam, friends and frienemies.
Keep connecting with the true authentic self…existence is much more expansive than categorizations.
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SEE ME MURAL
SEE ME MURAL
Cambridge edition- 17 hours…the race against rain.
May everyone be as supported as we were on this mural. May all your endeavors raise the vibrations.
And there was that time when the prolific @marka_27 assisted me. This dude is the truth.
Even @toughdumplin got a lil dirty. We appreciated that.
elevate and hold each other.
About the work:
“It is a reminder to walk with eyes open. Through color and composition, this piece explores the positive impact of representation and the lasting inspirational value of being able to see oneself iconically depicted”
👁 Curated by @streettheorygallery
📍 Location: 541 Mass Ave behind Rev Clinics @centralsqbid
🎥 @toughdumplin
📸 @leehopkins_ for @ow.ley
Big thank you’s to @redbull @centralsqbid @mikemovesfornow @marka_27 @brekone @toughdumplin and all of our contributors on @patronicity!
#mzicar #mixedmedia #streetart #streettheory #streettheoryproductions #celebrateblackwomen #blm #blacklivesmatter #seeme