-
I believe there is beauty
-
in hearing the voices of people
who haven't been heard.
-
["Drawing the Blinds," 2014]
-
["The Jerome Project
(Asphalt and Chalk) III," 2014]
-
[Beneath an Unforgiving Sun
(From A Tropical Space)," 2020]
-
That's a complex idea,
-
because the things that must be said
are not always lovely.
-
But somehow,
-
if they're reflective of truth,
-
I think, fundamentally,
that makes them beautiful.
-
(Music)
-
There's the aesthetic beauty of the work
-
that in some cases functions
as more of a Trojan horse.
-
It allows one to open their hearts
to difficult conversations.
-
Maybe you feel attracted to the beauty,
-
and while compelled by the technique,
-
the color,
-
the form or composition,
-
maybe the difficult
conversation sneaks up.
-
["Billy Lee and Ona Judge
Portraits in Tar," 2016]
-
I really taught myself how to paint
-
by spending time at museums
-
and looking at the people that --
-
the artists, rather --
that I was told were the masters.
-
Looking at the Rembrandts
["The Night Watch"],
-
Renoir ["Luncheon of the Boating Party"],
-
Manet ["Luncheon on the Grass"],
-
it becomes quite obvious
-
that if I'm going to learn
how to paint a self-portrait
-
by studying those people,
-
I'm going to be challenged
-
when it comes to mixing my skin
-
or mixing the skin
of those people in my family.
-
There's literally formulas
written down historically
-
to tell me how to paint white skin --
-
what colors I should use
for the underpainting,
-
what colors I should use
for the impasto highlights --
-
that doesn't really exist for dark skin.
-
It's not a thing.
-
It's not a thing
-
because the reality is,
our skin wasn't considered beautiful.
-
The picture, the world that is represented
in the history of paintings
-
doesn't reflect me.
-
It doesn't reflect the things
that I value in that way,
-
and that's the conflict
that I struggle with so frequently,
-
is, I love the technique
of these paintings,
-
I have learned from the technique
of these paintings,
-
and yet I know that they have
no concern for me.
-
And so there are so many of us
who are amending this history
-
in order to simply say we were there.
-
Because you couldn't see
doesn't mean we weren't there.
-
We have been there.
-
We have been here.
-
We've continued to be seen
as not beautiful,
-
but we are,
-
and we are here.
-
So many of the things that I make
-
end up as maybe futile attempts
to reinforce that idea.
-
["Drawing the Blinds," 2014]
-
["Seeing Through Time," 2018]
-
Even though I've had the Western training,
-
my eye is still drawn
to the folks who look like me.
-
And so sometimes in my work,
-
I have used strategies like whiting out
the rest of the composition
-
in order to focus on the character
who may go unseen otherwise.
-
I have cut out other figures
from the painting,
-
one, to either emphasize their absence,
-
or two, to get you to focus
on the other folks in the composition.
-
["Intravenous (From
a Tropical Space)," 2020]
-
So "The Jerome Project," aesthetically,
draws on hundreds of years
-
of religious icon painting,
-
["The Jerome Project
(My Loss)," 2014]
-
a kind of aesthetic structure
that was reserved for the church,
-
reserved for saints.
-
["Madonna and Child"]
-
["Leaf from a Greek Psalter
and New Testament"]
-
["Christ Pantocrator"]
-
It's a project that is an exploration
of the criminal justice system,
-
not asking the question
"Are these people innocent or guilty?",
-
but more, "Is this the way
that we should deal with our citizens?"
-
I started a body of work
-
because after being
separated from my father
-
for almost 15 years,
-
I reconnected with my father, and ...
-
I really didn't know how
to make a place for him in my life.
-
As with most things I don't understand,
-
I work them out in the studio.
-
And so I just started making
these portraits of mug shots,
-
starting because I did
a Google search for my father,
-
just wondering what had happened
over this 15-year period.
-
Where had he gone?
-
And I found his mug shot,
which of course was of no surprise.
-
But I found in that first search
97 other Black men
-
with exactly the same first and last name,
-
and I found their mug shots,
and that -- that was a surprise.
-
And not knowing what to do,
-
I just started painting them.
-
Initially, the tar was a formula
that allowed me to figure out
-
how much of these men's life
had been lost to incarceration.
-
But I gave up that,
-
and the tar became far more symbolic
-
as I continued,
-
because what I realized is
-
the amount of time that you spend
incarcerated is just the beginning
-
of how long it's going to impact
the rest of your life.
-
So in terms of beauty within that context,
-
I know from my friend's family
-
who have been incarcerated,
-
who are currently incarcerated,
-
folks want to be remembered.
-
Folks want to be seen.
-
We put people away for a long time,
-
in some cases,
-
for that one worst thing
that they've done.
-
So to a degree,
-
it's a way of just saying,
-
"I see you.
-
We see you."
-
And I think that, as a gesture,
-
is beautiful.
-
In the painting "Behind
the Myth of Benevolence,"
-
there's almost this curtain
of Thomas Jefferson
-
painted and pulled back
to reveal a Black woman who's hidden.
-
This Black woman is at once
Sally Hemings,
-
but she's also every other Black woman
-
who was on that plantation Monticello
-
and all the rest of them.
-
The one thing we do know
about Thomas Jefferson
-
is that he believed in liberty,
-
maybe more strongly than anyone
who's ever written about it.
-
And if we know that to be true,
if we believe that to be true,
-
then the only benevolent thing
to do in that context
-
would be to extend that liberty.
-
And so in this body of work,
-
I use two separate paintings
-
that are forced together
on top of one another
-
to emphasize this tumultuous
relationship between Black and White
-
in these compositions.
-
And so, that --
-
that contradiction,
-
that devastating reality
that's always behind the curtain,
-
what is happening
in race relations in this country --
-
that's what this painting is about.
-
The painting is called
"Another Fight for Remembrance."
-
The title speaks to repetition.
-
The title speaks to the kind of violence
against Black people
-
by the police
-
that has happened
and continues to happen,
-
and we are now seeing it happen again.
-
The painting is sort of editorialized
as a painting about Ferguson.
-
It's not not about Ferguson,
-
but it's also not not about Detroit,
-
it's also not not about Minneapolis.
-
The painting was started because
-
on a trip to New York
-
to see some of my own art
with my brother,
-
as we spent hours walking
in and out of galleries,
-
we ended the day by being stopped
by an undercover police car
-
in the middle of the street.
-
These two police officers
with their hands on their gun
-
told us to stop.
-
They put us up against the wall.
-
They accused me of stealing art
-
out of a gallery space
where I was actually exhibiting art.
-
And as they stood there
with their hands on their weapons,
-
I asked the police officer
what was different about my citizenship
-
than that of all of the other people
-
who were not being disturbed
in that moment.
-
He informed me that they had been
following us for two hours
-
and that they had been getting
complaints about Black men,
-
two Black men walking
in and out of galleries.
-
That painting is about the reality,
-
that it's not a question
-
of if this is going to happen again,
-
it's a question of when.
-
This most recent body of work
is called "From a Tropical Space."
-
This series of paintings
is about Black mothers.
-
The series of paintings takes place
in a supersaturated,
-
maybe surrealist world,
-
not that far from the one we live in.
-
But in this world,
-
the children of these Black women
-
are disappearing.
-
What this work is really about
is the trauma,
-
the things that Black women
and women of color in particular
-
in our community
-
have to struggle through
in order to set their kids out
-
on the path of life.
-
What's encouraging for me
-
is that this practice of mine
-
has given me the opportunity
-
to work with young people in my community.
-
I'm quite certain
the answers are not in me,
-
but if I'm hopeful at all,
-
it's that they may be in them.
-
"NXTHVN" is a project that started
about five years ago.
-
NXTHVN is a 40,000-square-foot
arts incubator
-
in the heart of the Dixwell neighborhood
-
in New Haven, Connecticut.
-
This is a predominantly
Black and Brown neighborhood.
-
It is a neighborhood that has
the history of jazz at every corner.
-
Our neighborhood, in many ways,
has been disinvested in.
-
Schools are struggling to really
prepare our population
-
for the futures ahead of them.
-
I know that creativity
is an essential asset.
-
It takes creativity
-
to be able to imagine a future
-
that is so different than the one
that is before you.
-
And so every artist in our program
has a high school studio assistant:
-
there's a high school student
that comes from the city of New Haven
-
who works with them
and learns their craft,
-
learns their practice.
-
And so we've seen the ways
-
in which pointing folks
at the power of creativity
-
can change them.
-
Beauty is complicated
-
because of how we define it.
-
I think that beauty and truth
-
are intertwined somehow.
-
There is something
-
beautiful
-
in truth-telling.
-
That is:
-
that as an act, truth-telling
-
and the myriad ways it manifests --
-
there's beauty in that.