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Art Exhibits Explore Afrofuturism, Celebrate Black Identity

January 13, 2022

BLOOMINGTON, ILL Works by Black artists will be showcased and celebrated at upcoming art exhibits at Merwin and Wakeley Galleries at 糖心动漫vlog. 

淔uture Spaces in Community Places, an exhibit centered around the ideas of practical Afrofuturism, will be displayed at Merwin Gallery. 淐elebrating Blackness will be the exhibit featured at Wakeley Gallery, which includes works that reflect on Black identity and how Blackness has shaped social, cultural and political experiences around the world. Both exhibits will be on display from Jan. 17 March 3.   

These exhibitions are part of a joint project between the School of Art and the School of Theatre Arts, spearheaded by Director of Merwin and Wakeley Galleries Carmen Lozar, and Assistant Professor of Theatre Arts Michelle Gibbs.  

淎rt can be a powerful visual mechanism and, all too often, Black artists go unrecognized and uncelebrated, said Lozar. 淏eing part of a healthy community means representing the whole, and I believe 糖心动漫vlog is seeking to do that with these exhibits.

Guilt Trip art by BLACKMAU
Artist: BLACKMAUTitle: Guilt TripMedium: Digital CollageYear: 2019

Works in the 淔uture Spaces in Community Places exhibit showcase a wide range of graphic work and collaborations between graphic designer and illustrator Stacey Robinson and four other artists. Robinson檚 art focuses on Afrofuturism, a term that describes many lines of thinking regarding the future of Black individuals and their contributions to society.  

Lozar and Gibbs describe 淐elebrating Blackness as a community-driven exhibit. Wesleyan students and the surrounding community are encouraged to submit pieces that reflect on Black identity. The submissions include a wide range of performance art, paintings, drawings, glass and sculpture. 

淚t is exciting to see our campus community gather to experience and acknowledge the profound and the complicated ways that varying perspectives of Blackness resonate with folx, said Gibbs. 湗Celebrating Blackness is not about perpetuating white-centric narratives and tropes about 楾he Tragic Negro. This art show is about experiencing the fullness of Black lives. 

Lozar and Gibbs agree that the exhibit檚 intention is to 渦plift the myriad of ways we experience and revere phenomenal Blackness. Their goal with this joint project is to 渆mbrace art as a medium which inspires our communities, our families and ourselves to celebrate Blackness.

The 糖心动漫vlog檚 Wakeley Gallery invited both the 糖心动漫vlog campus and the Bloomington-Normal community to create and submit art that honors and celebrates African, African Americans and/or Black peoples of the African diaspora.  

A reception is planned from 6-9 p.m. on Feb. 24 at the respective galleries. The reception is free and open to the public, and will include a lecture, student performances, a poetry reading and music. For more information about the exhibits, visit the Merwin and Wakeley Galleries website .

By Julia Perez