Uncategorized
Uncategorized
Artist Talk
Myrtis Bedolla examines the life and artwork of Delilah W. Pierce (1904-1992). Myrtis will discuss Delilah Pierce within the context of her contemporaries. Dr. Debra Ambush presents Open Our Eyes: The Enduring Arts Community Legacy of Delilah W. Pierce. Comments from family members of Delilah W. Pierce share personal stories of her life.
Artist Talk
Artists’ Talk: The tensions in this exhibition concern the scale between large and small and the juxtaposition between organic vs geometric. Both are clearly evident in the works of Lynda Smith-Bugge and Janet Wheeler in their spiritual explorations of nature’s ancient rhythms. In Smith-Bugge’s large scale works she unveils the tree’s innermost being, revealing burled patterns, insect ravaged wood and the striation of the grain. Wheeler’s intimate boxes are both containers for sacramental objects and ritual platforms for offerings or altars.

Artist
I Was Always Here Before You (detail), 2012, by Michael Platt
view the exhibition | watch artists’ talk

Her work has been exhibited internationally and is included in the collections of the Reginald F. Lewis Museum and the U.S. State Department. Her latest work—a combination of tissue paper, printmaking, collage, and sculpture—was hailed by the International Review of African American Art as “a vibrant, beating assemblage of color.”
MK Asante is a bestselling author, award-winning filmmaker, hip-hop artist, and professor who CNN calls “a master storyteller and major creative force.”
Asante is the author of the critically acclaimed memoir Buck, described by Maya Angelou as “A story of surviving and thriving with passion, compassion, wit, and style.” Buck is a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers pick. His other books are It’s Bigger Than Hip Hop, Beautiful. And Ugly Too, and Like Water Running Off My Back.
Asante is a tenured professor of creative writing and film in the Department of English and Language Arts at Morgan State University.

Michael Platt’s imagery has centered on the transformation of the human spirit that occurs when it confronts imagined or actual events and circumstances. Using the female figure, he creates images intended to express traces of the human spirit, often inspired by spaces with a history and the presence of things left behind. Empty spaces are as much storytellers as those filled with living. Exploring the visual possibilities of such circumstances, Platt has addressed issues of slavery, the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and the levees, waiting, searching for home; and celebration.

Major exhibitions and publications include Celebrations: Three Generations of African American Women Sculptors: A Study in Paradox; Vice President and essayist for the Jacob Lawrence Catalog Riasonné Project, Over the Line: The Art and Life of Jacob Lawrence (University of Washington Press, 2000); Sugar and Spice: The Art of Bettye Saar (Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, 2003); Aminah Robinson: Aesthetic Realities/Artistic Vision in The Art of Aminah Robinson (Columbus Museum of Art, 2003); and Inner Being/Altered States: Painting the Life-Worlds of Beverly McIver’s Realities in The Many Faces of Beverly McIver (40 Acres Gallery, 2004). Most recently was her book, Hughie Lee-Smith, (2010) Pomegranate Press
Jose Mapily was born on August 13, 1941 in Washington, D.C. Mapily attended and graduated from Howard University in 1965, earning his B.A. degree in architecture. In 1972, Mapily earned his M.A. degree in city and regional planning, also from Howard University.
Mapily has also begun a career as an artist. His artwork can be described as gridlike paintings made out of white dots on a dark ground that resemble schematic drawings of buildings or circuit diagrams for electrical components. Mapily’s artwork appeared at the Gala Auction Exhibition at the WPA/Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.
Artist Talk
view the exhibition | watch artists’ talk
Artists’ Talk: Artists Lovers: Maya Freelon Asante and M. K. Asante, Carol Beane and Michael Platt, Leslie King-Hammond and Jose Mapily.

Video
In challenging the notion of the feminine archetype, artists embrace and reach beyond the boundaries of the female form to express the essence of a woman, figuratively, conceptually and metaphorically. Participating artists: Sondra Arkin, David Carlson, Oletha Devane, Phylicia Ghee, Michael Gross, Nora Howell, Edwin Remsburg, Rachel Rotenberg, and Mary Walker. Myrtis Bedolla, curator, Jessica Stafford-Davis, co-curator

Video
Five burgeoning women artists discuss the challenges of gaining recognition in the highly competitive and male dominated art world. Featuring: Maya Freelon Asante, Elsa Gebreyesus, Jamea Richmond-Edwards, Lynda Smith-Bugge and Sigrid Vollerthun. Moderator: Myrtis Bedolla
Video
Artist Talk: What do President Barack Obama, Marilyn Monroe, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Paul Reubens (Pee-wee Herman) have in common? According to artist Charly Palmer, each has a “Tar Baby”. In this exhibition, Palmer boldly asks “What is Your Tar Baby?” as he appropriates African folklore to address issues of bigotry, racism and stereotypes. He examines the lives of athletes, civil rights leaders, entertainers, politicians, scholars, African and Native Americans.
exhibition | exhibition catalogue

Artist Talk
Artists’ Talk: The Secret Garden Revealing the Inner Sanctum is the culmination of Goldman’s three year collaboration with Elizabeth Catlett, Michael Gross, Jake Muirhead, Marti Patchell and Renee Stout in which etchings, monotypes, screen prints, and woodcuts become the conveyers of nature and personal mythology.
Artist Talk
Artist Talk: Parallel Evolution, a retrospective of New York based sculptor, M. Scott Johnson (b. 1968), which chronicles his artistic vision from 2000 – 2008.