Tag Archives: african american artists

Morton Fine Art and NATE LEWIS featured in Fairmont Magazine

21 Jun

 

Undiscovered D. C.

A collection of hidden gems in the US capital

 

Head Underground

Blink and you’ll miss some of the coolest art spaces in town. Leave the crowds at the new David Adjaye-designed National Museum of African American History and Culture and head to Morton Fine Art for under-the-radar African American artists like self-taught local, Nate Lewis. Or descend 20 feet to Dupont Circle station. Built in 1949, it was discontinued after streetcars went out of style, then reopened in 2016 as Dupont Underground. The 15,000 square-foot space is now a hub for alternative arts and culture and hosts talks by Pulitzer-prize-winning photojournalists and New York Times columnists. -EVE THOMAS

 

 

New Works by NATE LEWIS

11 Apr
Mobile, hand sculpted paper photo print, 40″ x 26″​
We are excited to announce new works by Washington, DC based artist NATE LEWIS. They are from his latest series Tensions in Tapestries
 
We all have a lens through which we see. Our lens is distilled by our patterns of seeing and thinking which continually refines our lens. The lens we come to form becomes our filter.
Using figurative and portrait style images I hand-sculpt patterns and textures on to single sheets of paper that reveal unseen tensions on and within bodies representative of the past, present, and future – the physical and the spiritual, the tangible and intangible. 
Internal, as well as external influences come to refine our patterns of thinking, seeing, interacting and loving. Through the use of presence and absence, textures and distortion, I aim to challenge the filters we hold that dictate our views and our actions.
Through an attentive, intentional process of sculpting patterns and terrains of texture on bodies, I seek for this work to mirror the intentionality and consistency it can take in ones patterns of thinking and seeing to hold an empathetic lens.
-NATE LEWIS, 2017
 
Nathaniel Lewis grew up in Beaver Falls, near Pittsburgh, Pa. Born 1985, Nate benefited from the cultural mix of his Trinidad-born father who was raised in Brooklyn and his white American-born mother, raised in Philadelphia. He graduated from VCU with his BSN and has been a practicing critical care nurse for the past five years as well as professional fine artist. Tensions in Tapestries is Nate’s second solo exhibition at Morton Fine Art.
 
Please find images of the new works below. You can see more of Nate’s available works HERE.

Thrice, hand sculpted paper photo print, 26″ x 40″

Cloaked but Absent III, hand sculpted paper photo print, 40″ x 26″

Funk and Spine, hand sculpted paper photo print​, 40″ x 26″

Archaic Pages, hand sculpted paper photo print, 18″ x 22″

Clenched, ​hand sculpted paper photo print, 14″ x 18″

Conductor, hand sculpted paper photo print, 20″ x 22″

Dignity II, hand sculpted paper photo print, 22″ x 20″

Signals II, ​hand sculpted paper photo print, 24″ x 26″

Unbalanced and Clear, hand sculpted paper photo print, 24″ x 26″

MARTINA DODD on Black History Month

25 Feb

In 1926, historian Carter G Woodson along with other prominent leaders from the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (ASNLH) sponsored the first Negro History Week. Negro History Week, sought to promote the teachings of Black American legacy and achievement, especially in the nation’s public schools and universities.  This seven day celebration during the second week of February was later officially extended to a month long holiday by President Ford in 1976.

Much has happened in this country since 1926, Martin Luther King delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech, the first Black President was elected twice and the National Museum of African American History and Culture opened its doors.  As we use this month as an opportunity  to honor the central role of African Americans  within US history, we must also remember to salute those who are now actively creating their own legacy.  We at Morton Fine Art acknowledge and prioritize the advancements made by African Americans within this country, and applaud and thank artists, activists and educators who have made it a goal to do so within their practice.  Artists such as Maya Freelon Asante, Kesha Bruce and Nathaniel Donnett who continually use their artistic medium to preserve and highlight the stories of African Americans.

past_present_tense-webMAYA FREELON ASANTE, Past Tense Present, 2015, 8.5”x18″, tissue ink mono/photo print

Inspired by her discovery of a stack of water-soaked colored paper in her grandmother’s  basement, Freelon Asante’s tissue ink mono photo prints speak to the power of  familial history, connected-ness and renewal.  Bruce,  who also found inspiration from a grandparent’s belongings,  reconceptualizes  the Black American experience in her photo series (Re) Calling  & (Re) Telling,  through  old and damaged negatives  given to her by her grandfather. Bruce’s and Freelon Asante’s use of archival images to explore the connections between personal mythologies and collective memory both help to re-center the black family unit within the American narrative.

that-they-might-be-lovely-webKESHA BRUCE, That They Might Be Lovely, 12″x9″, archival pigment print, edition of 15

Nathaniel Donnett’s work articulates the complex cultural concerns of a “united nation” still divided by racial tension.  In his Small Bag series, Donnett makes reference to the “paper bag test” and its South African equivalent the  “pencil test,” (two tests used to distinguish a person’s racial identity and/or their ability to “pass” as white) while prompting his viewers to take a four question test of their own that relate to acceptable beauty standards, microaggressions and racial biases. By asking his audience to finish statements like;  “Good hair can be A) Kinky B) Straight C) Wavy D) All of the above,” he brings to light America’s  legacy of racism, colorism and its obsession with classification.

smallbag18-cropNATHANIEL DONNETT, Small Bag 18, 10.75″x5″ graphite, charcoal and printed ink on paper
bag

Although Black History Month is quickly coming to a close, we should continue to support these artists as they maintain their dedication in keeping the  stories of our ancestors alive.

-MARTINA DODD for Morton Fine Art, February 2017

AMBER ROBLES-GORDON Featured in BmoreArt

24 Jan

An Interview with Amber Robles-Gordon by Cara Ober

One of my favorite images from the most recent BmoreArt Journal of Art + Ideas features Myrtis Bedolla and Alex Hyman sitting in the front window of Galerie Myrtis in Baltimore. They gaze out toward a gorgeous stained-glass bowfront window up at a series of lively, rainbow-hued reedlike sculptures which dangle from the ceiling. There’s something intimate and seamless about this image despite the fact that it depicts an art gallery, which is typically a public space.

Perhaps it was the photo’s striking cohesion that caused an inadvertent omission of the artist’s name from the photo credits? After making a regrettable error in print, I was thrilled to connect with Amber Robles-Gordon, the DC-based sculptor and mixed media artist whose work is featured in the photograph, not only to apologize but to delve much more deeply into her work.

Despite the mistake, Robles-Gordon was gracious and generous. The following conversation has been an opportunity to learn more about her practice – one that is simultaneously emotional and personal, yet formal and structured. Robles-Gordon uses all sorts of materials and symbolic, bold color to explore nuanced perspectives on hybridity, using the physicality of her materials to represent the challenges and celebration inherent in her own existence.

Photo by Steven Spartana for Issue 3 of The BmoreArt Journal of Art + Ideas of Myrtis Bedolla and Alex Hyman in Galerie Myrtis with Amber Robles-Gordon’s “Above All You Must Not Play At God,” a Mixed Media Installation celebrating the life of Henrietta Lacks.

BmoreArt: Before settling in Washington, DC, you lived all over the world. Can you talk about how your family and upbringing has impacted your life as an artist? 

My family is from the Caribbean – primarily from St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and Antigua, West Indies. I was born in Puerto Rico, raised in Arlington, Virginia, and have lived in Washington, DC for the last 20 years.

I am the oldest of two: my brother Alanzo Robles-Gordon and I are about seven years apart. By the time I was 12 years old, my parents were divorced. My father actively remained in our lives until I was 16 and my brother was about 4 years old. My brother and I were reluctantly indoctrinated to the cycle of being with our Dad every other weekend. My parents’ separation and then divorce tore away at my perception of bliss, of family, and of joy. Watching my mother, brother, and myself manage the cumbersome and overwhelming load of divorce was traumatic. Especially when you, as a 12 year-old, realize that infidelity was the primary reason.

It is my mother’s will and power that supported and nourished my authentic self. My mother, Carmen Robles-Inman, taught my brother and me that creating, writing, and self-expression were integral parts of one’s self and one’s family existence. She made sure to expose us to various visual art forms and cultural experiences. Additionally, through her love of people and languages, and her professional experiences as a public health specialist and social service practitioner, she made sure to envelop my brother and me in a patchwork of Afro-Latino, Caribbean, Central American, and American friends and loved ones.

Can you talk more about your multicultural roots and growing up outside of DC?

Growing up an Afro-Latina within the Arlington County school system during the 80’s was a challenging experience. I looked African-American, but did not act “black enough.” I talked “white” or spoke “too proper” and did not speak fluent Spanish and further did not look Latina. By nine years old I was already “developed.” I never needed make-up, I naturally looked grown. I was always one of just a few minority students within magnet programs from elementary to high school. The dichotomy of my Arlington county school experience made it hard to be multi-anything. I could not be a black girl and be smart or be a black girl and be pretty. I have countless memories of being challenged by for example white Arlington boys because I was assigned the same reading book as they were or in the same AP class and that just “could not be.”

Photo taken by Dianne Smith, detail of “My Rainbow is Enuf,” mixed media on chicken wire, 2014 as part of I found God in myself exhibition, at African American Museum of Philadelphia.

 

So the art making helped you to create your own identity because it was so hard to be yourself?

From an early age, I found solace, pride, and joy both from the process of creating art and in the artwork I produced. I have known from age 10 that I wanted to be an artist. As a young woman, it was clear to me that creating art was one of my most important personal resources. Having this knowledge at an early age forged a link between my social experiences and my art. My artwork from high school through college focused on drawing, photography, creating collages, and documenting my life experience.

My social constructs of being an Afro-Latina raised by a single mother in Arlington Virginia, has impacted or constructed who I am as individual and therefore impacts the methodology behind my artwork. I believe my Latino, African, and Caribbean heritage is inherent in my artwork. Hence, my artwork is a visual representation of my hybridism: a fusion of my gender, ethnicity, cultural, and social experiences.

“Of South and Fire,” Mixed Media on canvas, 2015, (Detail of Awakening the Matrilineal), an installation at American Univeristy, Katzen Art Center

You earned your MFA from Howard University in DC. What was your graduate school experience like and how did it impact your work? Can you talk a little about what your work was like before school and how your work and thinking changed by the end of it? Also – what was the impact of attending a HBC on your awareness of history and culture?

At entry into Howard University’s (HU) Department of Art, my artwork was predominantly two-dimensional, figurative collages and primarily about personal contemplations and explorations of self. During my second year of graduate study, the creation of two separates series, Light and Colored Lights Beads and The Matrix, sparked the identification of the matrix or grid as the underlying framework of my artwork. It provides a visual structure and conceptual framework for my art. The matrix symbolically represents both positive and negative aspects of our society and the background of human existence.

The grids and matrices address gender boundaries which have historically limited the opportunities for women in a patriarchal society. I merge colored, feminine objects and masculine forms — the grids and matrices — in order to visually fuse the various materials and female/male energies. The found objects symbolically articulate the need to recycle energy and power inherent to discarded materials.

Both series, Colored Light Beads and The Matrix, are iterations of the influence of Alma Thomas and Georges-Pierre Seurat’s work. Colored Light Beads are acrylic paintings. Each grid is set in a white square with slender parallel columns of varying tones of colors rising from top to bottom.

The Matrix Series – Quilt Matrix, Ladder Matrix, and Rain Matrix – became templates for a larger series titled Heal Thyself, which consisted of 3 – 31″ x 60″ panels of sewn, collaged, and/or adhered feminine materials and found objects on canvas. Heal Thyself was my first departure into the fold of fiber or textile arts. My objective was to create artwork that incorporated sewing cloth and adhering objects to canvas. I wanted the work to appear as a wall hanging or a scroll. Working with unprimed canvas allowed me to use a sewing machine to add cloth materials. In addition, the canvas would be able to withstand the weight of heavier objects being attached to it. Just as I previously used various paper materials as my source of color, I began using cloth materials and other found objects as my source of color.

As I began to search for other ways to represent matrices within my work, I came across a 110″ x 110″ piece of chicken wire that was bracketed to a wooden frame. My desire was to weave colored materials through the three-dimensional structure. This structure eventually evolved into the piece titled Flight of the Chicken Wire, a 107″ X 107 in” three-dimensional fiber and sculptural form. This work is a three-dimensional, life-size manifestation of the matrix represented throughout my work.

Photo by Dianne Smith, “My Rainbow is Enuf,” as part of I found God in myself exhibition, at Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture

 

Regardless of the physical material used to represent the matrix, be it chicken wire, fabric, canvas, paper or acrylic grids, the matrix is the visual foundation of my artwork and it metaphysically represents the fabric — weft and warp — of our society and the imbalanced interactions between masculine and feminine energy. As I work with colored objects and materials, I am engaging the masculine and feminine energies represented in nature, colors, and objects to balance a form. I view this as a symbolic action employed to produce a transcendent positive social message, feelings, and/or critique.

My graduate experience has helped me to refine my artistic voice and has provided me the ability to create comprehensive series and to articulate the ideas and conceptual framework concerning my artwork. During my graduate studies, I was able to explore a number of media including graphic arts, assemblage, mixed media on canvas, and three-dimensional fiber woven structures. Subsequently, I have increased the range of media I employ and expanded the materials in my visual vocabulary.

Most importantly, the requirement of a written thesis, a visual exhibition, and oral defense forced me to examine and reevaluate myself and also manifest a 43 page paper titled “Matrices of Transformation.” After five years of attending this program as a single parent of a young child, working part-time, creating artwork, exhibiting two separate thesis defense committees, and engaging in one heightened exchange with a committee chair member (not to mention my various roles as part of BADC), “Matrices of Transformation” is to date one of the most important documents in my life. I am now cognizant and supported by both intuition and the academic reasoning as to why I utilize specific colors, materials, and concepts within my artwork and I have the ability to place my artwork within a historical and cultural context. Additionally, my experiences at HU broadened and strengthened my ability to write and speak about my artwork confidently.

“The Male, The Architect, The Protector,” mixed media on canvas, 2015

 

You are currently based in Washington, DC and exhibit your work all over the world. You’ve been significantly involved in the arts in DC, building community there since 2004, and an active member (as well as exhibitions coordinator, VP, and Prez!) of the BADC (Black Artists of DC) organization. How would you describe the art community in DC? Can you explain the BADC group – what it is and does? Also why ‘giving back’ to your community is important to you?

I graduated from Trinity University (previously Trinity College) in Washington DC in 2005 with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration. I pursued a business degree because I planned to manage my own art-based business and needed the knowledge to do so successfully. After graduating from Trinity, I began a search for an art community as well as a graduate program. My 15 year plan included applying to my top five graduate schools to pursue an art degree. However, I was introduced to Black Artists of DC (BADC) and several artists’ educators such as Gina Lewis and Aziza Gibson-Hunter. BADC is an African-centered, multi-generational artist community dedicated to “promote, develop and validate the culture, artistic expressions and aspirations of past and present artists of Black-Afrikan ancestry.”

I joined BADC in 2005 and my initial interactions with BADC convinced me to apply to Howard University’s Fine Art graduate program. In fact, I never actually applied to any of the other four graduate programs of my “top five” list. I consciously choose a Historically Black College/University (HBCU) at which to pursue my graduate degree. I am appreciative of the experiences and opportunities my elementary and high-school education provided however, once given the choice, I could not attend another predominantly white institution. I was determined to find a circumstance that would educate and nourish my spirit. My Masters in Fine Art program was my gift to myself… my authentic artist self.

At BADC, I found an art-family and I jumped in head first: I volunteered, attended meetings and advocated for BADC’s mission and its members. I began to assist with curating BADC’s first exhibits, Hidden Treasures and Found, with lead curator Barbara Blanco. Eventually, I become part of the Elders Council and began to contribute to the process of creating structure and establishing organizational by-laws and a mission statement, among other mechanisms. My work and involvement culminated into becoming the Vice President and then President of BADC.

I have often described dual involvement at BADC while completing my graduate work as “being in a dual master’s program: a Masters in Fine Art at Howard University and a masters in being as Fine Art Artist with BADC.” It was truly an invaluable, expansive and nurturing experience.

My association with BADC has been important to my development as a person and as a professional artist. The experience with BADC was an enriching supplement to my academic endeavors at HU as well as an asset to my understanding of art as an industry. BADC’s African-inspired structure has created an environment that promotes exploration of and awareness of one’s ethnic identity and the relationship to the power of art and community.

“The Female, The Oracle, The Nurturer,” mixed media on canvas, 2015

 

Additionally, the more I worked with BADC, the greater my exposure to the DC art scene. For example, through BADC I became aware of and involved with other important local art organizations, among them the DC Advocates for the Arts (a DC non-profit that “support[s] development of public policy for a creative, healthy, sustainable, and economically viable District of Columbia),” Artomatic (a multi-week, non-juried, multimedia arts event in DC), as well as Millennium Arts Salon (an art collector based organization dedicated to enhancing cultural literacy through arts programing).

In 2010, while I was still BADC president, I began having conversations with friend and artistic peer Jamea Richmond-Edwards. Richmond-Edwards is a collage and portrait artist and was also a BADC member and MFA student at Howard University. Our conversations about personal experiences in the art world, cultural influence, the legacy of Howard University, and the examination of artist groups and movements – Spiral, Black Artists of DC, Africobra, and the Black Arts Movement – lead us to co-found Delusions of Grandeur.

Today, Delusions of Grandeur is a collective of emerging artists brought together by shared interest and commitment to our art and to the mission to build a contemporary art cannon. We recognized a need to provide critique and commentary on social infrastructures within American society and to contribute to the prominence of the collective black voice and presence within contemporary art. Delusions of Grandeur is comprised of artists Shaunté Gates, Jamea Richmond-Edwards, Amber Robles-Gordon, Stan Squirewell, Wesley Clark, and Larry Cook.

In 2012, I stepped down from the role of BADC president. Although I am no longer actively involved in BADC, I see Delusions of Grandeur as part of the Howard Univeristy continuum and and influence of Black Artists of DC.

“Wired,” Mixed Media on Chicken Wire, 2011, Pleasant Plains Workshop,Washington, D.C.

 

Who are your favorite artists? Who has been most influential on your work?

My artist muse has always been the abstract expressionist painter, Alma Thomas (1891-1978). I was exposed to her artwork around seven or eight. My mother, at that time a student Georgetown University, was taking an African-American Art appreciation class taught by a visiting professor from Howard University. I was the only child at the time, which meant she took me everywhere. A class assignment was given to attend an exhibit featuring Alma Thomas. One of my most vibrant childhood memories is of my first encounter of Alma Thomas’ artwork. I can recall the physiological response of joy and being energized by simply being in front of her artwork. Her use of color and light has always greatly moved me, speaks to my spirit, and raises my energy. Additionally, my exposure to Impressionism, primarily Georges-Pierre Seurat (1859-1891), has also influenced the use of color in my artwork.

Both Thomas and Seurat have inspired my interpretation and use of color in my work. I am fascinated by Thomas’ mastery of color, space, and composition. She is also known for her bold use of primary colors, geometric forms, and her painterly brush strokes. Thomas left small spaces of white canvas in between her brush strokes, creating the appearance of mosaics or stained glasswork. As I began to evaluate the value, purpose, and aesthetic aspects of my art, I noticed similarities regarding the use of color and light, between the works of Alma Thomas, Seurat, and myself. Seurat, was a post-impressionist draftsman and painter who studied color theories, specifically those of Delacroix and the color scientists Herman von Helmholtz and Michael Chervreul. Seurat was interested in the science of painting and the process of optical color mixing. He used white space to enhance the perception of color. He created a technique called pointillism, in which an image is rendered using tiny dots of primary and secondary colors. When the image is viewed from afar, the eye fuses the colors to create intermediate colors.

In my early works, I used torn colored paper to create figurative paper mosaic compositions. Ripping the paper revealed its white fiber pulp, which provided areas of white space between each portion of color. Many of my paper mosaics appear from afar to look like Thomas’ paintings, until you come closer and see the texture of overlapping paper. The manner in which Thomas and Seurat used color and white space has influenced the way I visually perceive color and has informed my placement of colors. While appreciating their paths, I have used their groundbreaking explorations as a point of departure to create a technique or process of my own.

The various fabrics and objects I use provide an extensive color palette. Because I use colored items, I am also working with wavelengths of light absorbed or reflected by the object. I am interested in the energy dispersed, the visual sensation that occurs from viewing colors, and specifically, combined colored materials.

Combining various colored items can increase the visual sensation of the viewer. As a result, I intentionally focus on the distribution of vibrant colors within a composition. Each artwork has a distinctive rhythm, pattern, and sensation because each has a varied arrangement of colored materials.

Glass, Purse, Belt and Bra Traps, Mixed Media on Canvas, 2007

 

You work in a range of materials, but you are best known for mixed media assemblages with fabric and found objects. Please explain what these materials mean to you and how they enable you to think differently… how they expand or enrich your creative thinking process?

I definitely have an interest in materials or materiality yet I’m not sure if its equal to my interest in color. Although both are languages that I communicate with regularly, they effect me differently. Materials intrigue me but colors uplift and excite me.

I use the cloth materials and other found objects for my source of color. My color palette is the visual color spectrum and beyond. The perception of the traditional visual color palette has been expanded due to the range of additional colors and textures that now exist because of technological advancements in photography, the production of fabric, clothing, and other objects.

I use fabric, found objects, and color for their color value and perceived meaning. Each object or fabric has a color and colors are wavelengths of light, a disbursement of energy. Each object is absorbing or reflecting all colors but the color you actually see. I work with this process of perceiving color and refer to it as a color sensation or color energy. I purposefully maximize this process by using an array of colors arranged together in bursts. Color value, refers to two things: 1. The color that has been given to or assigned to the object or fabric, and 2. Any additional qualities of the fabric or object that enhance its characteristics, like the texture, shape, or patterns. Additionally, value can refer to actual meaning assigned to the object or color.

Specifically, when viewing my large scale fabric installations people usually initially respond to the arrangements of color. If the installation or mixed media work includes objects, then the viewer focuses on the objects or fabrics themselves. Viewers, tend to see the color arrangement first, then examine the actual materials and objects.

Additionally, energy is inherent in each piece of fabric and object I utilize. Each object has a history, the energy that remains from discarded cloth or objects.

“My Rainbow is Enuf,” Mixed Media on Chicken Wire, 2014 at Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture

Can you talk about the issues that really inspire your practice and interest and/or enrage you?

My artwork is a reflection of my experience being a woman of Caribbean, Puerto Rican, and African decent yet raised in Arlington, Virginia. It speaks to the various plains and roles of existence a woman must navigate in order to take on the societal constructs imposed or imprinted upon them within this patriarchal society. However, selfishly, I use abstraction, color, found objects, and mixed media as my methods of communications and not figuration. Primarily because these languages and tools are familiar and rewarding.

Using figuration, specifically the female form to question or challenge sexist societal and cultural notions of inequality, just (at this point) doesn’t quench my artistic sensibilities. I would rather present my queries and commentary using a framework grounded in universally systematic concepts such as grids, matrixes, color, and energy that should fundamentally be valued equally because they pertain to the human experience, regardless of being presented in gender based visual discourse.

The three central concepts in my artwork are: my love of color, womanhood, and recycling of objects memories and energy. I desire my artwork to embody my spiritual connection to color and project a sense of energy to positively affect others. In my evaluation, because “color begins with and is derived from light, either natural or artificial,” and since colors represent specific aspects of nature and the human experience, this in turn connects me to nature, my art, and to the viewer.

My creations symbolically express and explore my concerns of how contradictory dynamics placed on women effect women’s perceived value, how they are treated, and ultimately influences how they perceive themselves. From what I have observed in my own and in other women’s behavior, it appears that we have been socialized to internalize numerous beliefs, customs, and notions about how we are supposed to act, look, and live our lives. Subsequently, I aim to visually convey these specific social dynamics by symbolically weaving them into the art through colored materials and objects that are used by women.

I choose materials that for me exemplify femininity as well as question my perception of self, other women, and our consumer behaviors and materialistic values. I juxtapose colorful feminine objects and materials with fences and grids, which are symbolically masculine. I interpret these items as masculine forms because they are made of metal and are traditionally used to delineate boundaries. This is done as an attempt to visually transcend the implied social boundaries that the fences and grids represent. Overall, my intention is to create works that attempt to visually parallel the social and gender inequalities that are manifested in our world due to the imbalances of feminine and masculine energies.

I attempt to preserve and recycle memories and time by creating art that incorporates items that once had specific meaning for others and myself. Many of the items are materials I found at thrift stores or have used myself. I am fascinated by what people initially become attached to and how these same “things” are later discarded when deemed useless or unnecessary. I use these pieces to focus on the healing power within myself and to draw attention to the act of creating as a process of recycling, regenerating, and rebuilding.

The Male and Female installation:
The Male, The Architect, The Protector, is the outer circle. The inner circle is The Male: The Universe.
The outer circular, The Female, The Oracle, The Nurturer, and the inner circle is The One, The Source Within. Mixed Media on Canvas, 2015, Honfleur Gallery, Washington, D.C.

*****

Author Cara Ober is the Founding Editor at BmoreArt.

Photo Credit: Top Image by Dianne Smith of artist Amber Robles-Gordon standing in front of the her work, “My Rainbow is Enuf,” as part of  I found God in Myself exhibition, at African American Museum of Philadelphia.

 

NATE LEWIS’ “Biological Tapestries – 1st Movement” highlighted in DCist

6 Apr
Opening this Friday, 8 April from 6pm-8pm at Morton Fine Art.  Don’t miss the opportunity to view Nate’s latest sculpted paper photo prints and congratulate him on his first solo exhibition already destined for great success!
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Arts Agenda: Cut Paper Edition

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Nate Lewis will have his first solo show at Morton Fine Arts, starting on April 8 (Courtesy of Nate Lewis).

April Arts Highlights

Biological Tapestries by Nate Lewis @ Morton Fine Art. Opens April 8. (Free)

Nate Lewis’ intricate paper sculptures are visually stunning in digital format, but need to be seen up close and personal to truly appreciate the detail. And, because much of this work draws from his experience working as a critical care nurse in an intensive care unit, they also explore the intensity of these life-altering moments, asking the viewer share the fragility and intimacy of the patient’s medical experiences. Stay tuned for a profile of the artist next week.

Morton Fine Art is located at 1781 Florida Ave NW.

MAYA FREELON ASANTE’s artwork at University of Maryland, Eastern Shore in “History Continues: Contemporary African American Artists

2 Feb

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UMES hosts Black History Month exhibit

“History Continues:  Contemporary African-American Artists,” the University of Maryland Eastern Shore’s Black History Month exhibit, opens Feb. 4 with a reception from 4-6 p.m. in the Mosely Gallery.

The art display, which runs through March 10, shows “how current events and culture inform the work of contemporary African-American artists,” gallery director Susan Holt said.  “All the artists are young, emerging artists from the Baltimore/Washington area who use quite different materials, themes and approaches, yet contain some connection to the relevance of Black History.”

Artists include:  Michael Booker (University of Maryland 2012), Maya Freelon Asante (School of Museum of Fine Art in Boston 2007), Larry Cook (George Washington 2013), Shaunte Gates, Jeffrey Kent (Maryland Institute College of Art 2010) and Jamea Richmond-Edwards (Howard University 2012).

Companion events accompany the art exhibit.

The Mosely Gallery is free and open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.  Call 410-651-7770 or visit www.moselygallery.com for more information.

 

Click here to view available artwork by MAYA FREELON ASANTE.
Artwork is available at Morton Fine Art, 1781 Florida Ave NW, Washington, DC 20009

(202) 628-2787, mortonfineart@gmail.com, http://www.mortonfineart.com

 

KESHA BRUCE makes For Harriet’s List of “10 Contemporary Black Women Visual Artists You Should Know”

21 Jan

 

For Harriet Logo

10 CONTEMPORARY BLACK WOMEN VISUAL ARTISTS YOU SHOULD KNOW

Mickalene Thomas, “Din Une Tres Belle Negresse 2,” 2011

by Nneka M. Okona

Carving out a space for themselves, their voices, their stories, their dedication to the craft of visual arts, this group of Black women, with varied interests and backgrounds, almost make it look effortless. These 10 brilliant Black women use their gifts and the allure of their artistry to explore a vast amount of subjects, issues and themes — sexuality, race, femininity, gender, history. And they do so in interesting, innovative ways.

Shantell Martin

Based in Brooklyn, Shanell’s artistry can best be described as telling the stories from her life using a black and white palette. Incorporating and transforming everyday items — walls, sneakers, luxury goods or any odds and ends — Shanell creates new masterpieces with her unique vision. To date, Shanell has collaborated with a number of brands, including 3×1 denim, Suno and Jaw and Bone.

Website

Brianna McCarthy

On first glance at any of Brianna’s work, the first thing you’re sure to notice are the bright, loud colors which combine in a harmonious blend. This Trinidad & Tobago native, where she is also currently based, prides herself on that signature, one which she uses to examine and begin discourse on topics she deems important — beauty, stereotypes and representation. Her work takes the form of performance art, fabric collage, traditional media and installations.

Website

Kara Walker

A bold expressionist who tackles the themes of history, power, race, repression and sexuality, Kara Walker is known for her trademark room size black cut paper silhouettes. In college and graduate school, she focused on painting, printmaking and overall design, although her work has taken many other forms, such as text, video, film, performance and cyclorama. Perhaps the most notable honor she received was a MacArthur Foundation genius grant, making her the second youngest person to ever receive it. Most recently, Kara’s much talked about exhibit “A Subtlety” appeared at the now demolished Domino Sugar Factory in Brooklyn.

More information

Renee Cox

Self-dubbed as one of the most controversial Black women working today, Renee doesn’t shy away from using her art as tool to inspire discourse on both racism and sexism. Two of her most reactionary pieces, perhaps, were “In It Shall be Named,” which depicted a Black man’s distorted body in elven separate pictures, hanging from a cross and “Yo Mama’s Last Supper,” a remake of the famous Leonardo Da Vinci piece with Renee nude as Jesus and all Black disciples except for Judas, shown as White.

Website

Kesha Bruce

In a beautiful marriage of magical & spiritual belief, memory and personal mythology, Kesha Bruce explores those connections through her work. Some notable collections, such as “(Re)calling and (Re)telling”, use mixed media to combine personal experience, family mythologies and African American history; and “The Totem Series”, which displays narrative portraits of hybrid beings. Currently, she has permanent collections at The Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture and The University of Iowa Women’s Center, to name a few. Kesha lives and works in France.

Website

Caitlin Cherry

Brooklyn-based Caitlin Cherry is most known for her large-scale installations in the Brooklyn-based museum Raw/Cooked series. In her project for the series entitled “Hero Safe”, Caitlin curated three paintings that drew upon Leonardo Da Vinci for inspiration. In each installation, there is a wood structure that acts as support for the painting present.

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Xaviera Simmons

Xaviera has always known on a soul level she wanted to be an artist, as she has always been a creator of something, even when being a midwife competed for her time. The breadth of her work touches on many types of visual artistry — installations, sculptures, photographs, videos and performances. Xaviera currently has several pieces on permanent collections, including at the High Museum in Atlanta, Georgia and the Museum of Contemporary Art in New York City.

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Mickalene Thomas

Femininity and beauty are the dominating themes present in Mickalene’s work, a New York City based artist. She routinely uses items such as rhinestones, acrylic and enamel to push her vision and to bring each of her pieces of art full circle. Mickalene cites Henri Matisse, Romare Bearden and Edourad Manet as inspiration which communicate her vision.

 Website

Akosua Adoma Owusu

A brilliant filmmaker, Akosua has made a name for herself in the filming scene. Akosua, who is Ghanian, to date has had her films appear in venues across the world, in festivals, museums, galleries and microcinemas. Most recently, her short film “Kwaku Ananse” was the winning film for Ghana at the 2013 Africa Movie Academy Awards for best film.

Website

Wangechi Mutu

With each stroke and with each creation, Wangechi’s motivation is to challenge the notions of female sexuality, particularly the depiction of sexuality of African women. Wangechi, who was born in Kenya, isn’t afraid to push the envelope and combine the elements of painting and collage in her pieces.

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Nneka M. Okona is a writer based in Washington, DC. Visit her blog, http://www.afrosypaella.com, her website, about.me/nnekaokona or follow her tweets, @NisforNneka.

Read more: http://www.forharriet.com/2014/12/contemporary-black-women-visual-artists.html#ixzz3xtoEm6mQ
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Click HERE to read the article in full.
Please contact Morton Fine Art for available artwork by KESHA BRUCE.
Morton Fine Art
1781 Florida Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20009
(202) 628-2787
mortonfineart@gmail.com
http://www.mortonfineart.com

MAYA FREELON ASANTE partners with Google for launch of OnHub Makers

23 Dec
Morton Fine Art

MAYA FREELON ASANTE partners with Google for the launch of OnHub Makers
 
 
Maya Freelon Asante with her OnHub sleeve design


 
Google‘s OnHub custom art sleeve by artist Maya FreelonAsante


Morton Fine Art is excited to share that MAYA FREELON ASANTE is one of Google‘s partner artists for OnHub Makers – making home internet look a little more like home!

Google 
invited her and a handful of other makers to create custom shell designs for the OnHub from TP-Link. See her design and others as well as download instructions to make your own! 
g.co/onhubmakers

About OnHub by Google

In addition to the new shell designs that Google introduced, they shared the files with artists, designers, and makers from around the world to create their own OnHub shells. Now it’s your turn. See their designs and get inspired to make your own.
Don’t miss the opportunity to congratulate MAYA FREELON ASANTE in person at the opening of her solo exhibition Impermanence this Saturday, December 12th from 2pm-6pm at Morton Fine Art!
 
 

Maya Freelon Asante, Divided/Whole, 2015, 25.5″x19″, spinning tissue ink monoprint
Impermanence
A solo exhibition of new artwork by MAYA FREELON ASANTE
 
Saturday, December 12th, 2015 – January 5th, 2016

OPENING DAY RECEPTION
Saturday, December 12th 2pm-6pm
 
The artist will be in attendance.
EXHIBITION LOCATION

Morton Fine Art (MFA)
1781 Florida Ave NW (at 18th & U Sts)
Washington, DC 20009
HOURS

Tuesday – Saturday 11am – 6pm
Sunday 12pm-5pm
About Impermanence
Impermance is Maya Freelon Asante‘s first solo exhibition following a deeply personal loss.  Deborah Willis, Ph.D. writes “Maya  FreelonAsante  explores  memory, memorial  and  family  in her  art  practice. She   also  examines  the social  and  artistic  space  within  the experience  of motherhood and   grieving.    Maya‘s  artwork  looks at the  fragility  of  life  and provides  the viewer  with  a   way  of retelling  a  story  about  life–joy and pain. Her current body of work draws on the temporal and is inspired by love of family specifically of her grandmother’s art practice as inspiration. “
About MAYA FREELON ASANTE‘S process & inspiration
“In 2005 I discovered a beautiful accident; a stack of water damaged tissue paper tucked away in my grandmother’s basement was left with a brilliant and intricate stain. Since then I’ve submerged myself in the medium of bleeding tissue paper sculpture and tissue ink monoprints, which exist as simultaneously transient and steadfast. This dichotomy continues to intrigue and surprise me as I wrestle with sharing the unique beauty, fragility, and strength of my art with the world.
Much like my grandmother, who never wasted a single grain of rice on her plate, I find a way to utilize tissue paper at every stage of creation – including the rich and colorful ink released when the paper is wet, the sculptural mounds formed when creating monoprints, and even the tiny ripped pieces no larger than a fingernail which are collected and wound into spiral sculptures. Improvisation and discovery play a big role in my creative process; by incorporating archival photographs I’m able to reappropriate images, bridging a gap between the past and future.
My grandmother always said she “made a way out of no way” and her personal endurance opened a path for my own creative discovery. Art for me is about finding the message in the medium and honoring what fuels our desire to preserve and protect it. Bringing more peace, joy and light into the world is my primary objective, while simultaneously appreciating the beauty of now and creating everlasting memories.”
MAYA FREELON ASANTE
About MAYA FREELON ASANTE
Maya Freelon Asante is an award-winning artist whose artwork was described by poet Maya Angelou as “visualizing the truth about the vulnerability and power of the human being,” and her unique tissue paper work was also praised by the International Review of African American Art as a “vibrant, beating assemblage of color.” She was selected by Modern Luxury Magazine as Best of the City 2013, by the Huffington Post’s “Black Artists: 30 Contemporary Art Makers Under 40 You Should Know”, and Cosmopolitan Magazine’s “Art Stars” as “the most badass female artists in the biz.”
Maya has exhibited her work nationally and internationally including Paris, Ghana, and US Embassies in Madagascar, Italy, Jamaica and Swaziland. She has been a professor of art at Towson University and Morgan State University. Maya has attended numerous residencies including Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, the Korobitey Institute and Brandywine Workshop. She earned a BA from Lafayette College and an MFA from the School of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. She is currently represented by Morton Fine Art in Washington, DC.

 

“Overcoming Depths” Essay on CHARLES WILLIAMS exhibition “Swim”

17 Sep

Overcoming Depths  

By Martina Dodd for Morton Fine Art

Charles Williams’ oceanscapes capture the dangerous beauty of the sea while simultaneously addressing his most personal and private fears.  His large-scale oil paintings of foam covered oceans are dimpled with waves and movement that submerge the viewer under a wave of intensity and serenity.   By actively examining his emotional response to the dark and murky abyss conveyed on canvas, viewers are urged to do the same with their own fears.

With shallow breaths, a quickened heartbeat and trembling hands, Williams, wading waist high in the water, snaps photos of waves as the ocean swells around his body. Once out of the ocean and back in his studio, he works from these images, which are often shaky and imperfect, to recreate them on canvas. The shakiness of the photographs do not take away from his hyperrealist paintings but symbolize his relationship with the sea. Williams recalls always having a fear of the dark, and the unknown depths of the sea seemed to be the darkest place of them all.  This phobia intensified at the age of eleven when he nearly drowned while playing in the ocean with his cousins. By forcing himself to wade in the water, the relived fear of his youth vividly translates through his camera and then again through his paintbrush.

This new body of work for his solo exhibition Swim at Morton Fine Art includes several figurative pieces – literally placing the artist within the artwork.  Unlike his large oceanscape paintings, which are meticulously detailed and based off of actual images, his self-portraits are created freehand and intuitively from his mind’s eye. Releasing himself from the restraints of measuring tools like grids and rulers, Williams’ intent is to capture his state of being rather than his physical attributes. His self-portraits purposefully omit parts of his face and vary in skin tone dependent on his mood. Williams longs to experience what he describes somewhat romantically as, the “liberating freedom of enjoying the water without fear”.  But his anxiety associated with the ocean coupled with the racial rhetoric surrounding swimming in the South has left a profound impact on Williams’ life and art.  

His aesthetically rich paintings span psychological and cultural realms by referencing contemporary and historic events in his life.  As a child Williams was taught that he could do anything he put his mind to, but after Williams’ close call with a watery death, he started to doubt this mantra and began to internalize the stereotypes he heard from his peers claiming that black people could not swim.  Growing up in South Carolina and hearing limiting and oppressive phrases like this led Williams to believe that there was something inherently wrong with him (and those of his complexion)  that prevented him from swimming.  With these thoughts still lingering in his mind, Williams’ work challenges the pejorative talk he once heard in his youth and still occasionally hears in his head today. Both therapeutic in nature and rebellious in spirit, his paintings address the universality of fear and analyze the origins and implications of racially motivated negative stereotypes.

As much as Williams strides to overcome his aquaphobia, his work is still very much based in and derived from his deep seated fear of water and the dark.  Nighttime study, along with his Lost and Found series, depict the ocean as it exists in darkness.   These pieces allow Williams to not only study the water at night, but to confront the monsters hidden under each wave.  In Nighttime Study, Williams represents the waves through texture by making both the ocean and the backdrop black. Akin to being blindfolded and having to read through touch, the waves are distinguishable only by the heavy impasto strokes of his paintbrush. Finding interest in the emotive contrast that different variations of light provoke, Williams uses the natural light of the moon in Lost and Found to reveal the water as it reaches the shore.  With flashlight in tow, Williams provides his own light when needed to explore troubling illusions in the dark.  The light, whether from the moon or his flashlight, serves as a tool of protection helping him subdue the fears that consume him both physically and mentally.

Although his insecurities surrounding the water may seem to overwhelm him and dominate his work, Williams has never allowed the fear to overpower him or dictate his life.  By revealing fear and exploring the idea of painful experiences within his paintings he hopes others will find the inspiration to confront their own personal fears as well.  Like the light that reflects off the ocean, Williams’ near death experiences are reflected off of each of his paintings- divulging his past to discover his future. 

CHARLES WILLIAMS solo exhibition “Swim” debuts at Morton Fine Art 9/25/15

15 Sep
Swim
A solo exhibition of oil paintings by CHARLES WILLIAMS

Friday, September 25th – October 13th, 2015

OPENING RECEPTION 
Friday, September 25th 6pm-8pm
The artist will be in attendance.
Lost and Found 4, 72″x96″, oil on canvas

EXHIBITION LOCATION

Morton Fine Art (MFA)
1781 Florida Ave NW (at 18th & U Sts)

Washington, DC 20009

HOURS

Tuesday – Saturday 11am – 6pm
Sunday 12pm-5pm
Swim, 30″x30″, oil on panel

 
About Swim
In Swim, his debut solo exhibition at Morton Fine Art, North Carolina based painter, CHARLES WILLIAMS explores deeply personal themes of aquaphobia and stereotypes of swimming and African Americans in the South. Swim expands on his solo Swim : An Artist’s Journey recently on view at The Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chaplin Art Museum.
Charles Williams‘ oceanscapes capture the dangerous beauty of the sea while simultaneously addressing his most personal and private fears stemming from nearly drowning at age 11.  To create seascape nocturnes for Swim, Williams forced himself to wade in the water, reliving the profound fear of his youth, to snap photos of waves with trembling hands and quickened heartbeat. Once out of the ocean and back in his studio, he worked from these source images, which are often shaky and imperfect, to recreate them on canvas.
As a child Williams was taught that he could do anything he put his mind to, but after his close call with a watery death, he started to doubt this mantra and began to internalize the stereotypes he heard from his peers claiming that black people could not swim.  Growing up in South Carolina and hearing limiting and oppressive phrases like this led Williams to believe that there was something inherently wrong with him (and those of his complexion) that prevented him from swimming.  In Swim, Williams also explores self portraits, created freehand and intuitively in contrast to his oceanscapes (which are drafted with measuring tools like grids and rulers) with the intent of capturing his state of being rather than his physical attributes.
“How we handle traumatic experiences both shapes and molds our identities. As an artist, I am deeply inspired to humbly respond to those experiences by orchestrating new viewpoints of the fears associated with them – in this case, the fear of water. It is my hope that the psychological and physical elements found in my work, which aim to acknowledge fear as a stepping-off point for overcoming it, elicit hope and compassion in its viewers. These paintings serve as a personal testimony of my decision to begin a journey toward freedom.”
-CHARLES WILLIAMS
About CHARLES WILLIAMS
 
Charles Williams is a contemporary realist painter from Georgetown, South Carolina and a graduate of the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) in Savannah, Georgia. He is currently earning his MFA from the University of North Carolina, Greensboro.
Recent achievements and awards include a Hudson River Landscape Fellowship, featured work in the Artists Magazines 28th Annual Art Competition, honorable mention from Southwest Art Magazines 21 Emerging Under 31 competition, 2012 Winner of the Fine Art Category from Creative Quarterly, 2013 selected artist for 28th Positive Negative juried art exhibition at East Tennessee State University, juror/curated by Michael Ray Charles from PBS Ar21.Williams‘ works has been shown in American Art Collector, Empty Magazine, Charleston Magazine, Grand Strand, Studio Visit, Bluecanvas and other national publications. He was recently interviewed and broadcast on ETV/ NPR station, entitled: Nature through the Eyes of an Artist. His contemporary landscapes have been exhibited in group and solo exhibitions in galleries in Washington, DC, New York, Vermont, California, Georgia, South Carolina and several other southeastern states.

 

CHARLES WILLIAMS painting Swim in his North Carolina studio
 
About Morton Fine Art
Founded as an innovative solution to the changing contemporary art market, Morton Fine Art (MFA) is a fine art gallery and curatorial group that collaborates with art collectors and visual artists to inspire fresh ways of acquiring contemporary art. Firmly committed to the belief that anyone can become an art collector, MFA’s mission is to provide accessibility to museum-quality contemporary art through a combination of innovative exhibitions and a new generation of art services.
For further information and images, please contact Amy Morton:
Exhibition catalogs available upon request.
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