Sistrunk Exhibition Explores

Sistrunk Exhibition Explores Gathering Places in Black Communities in South Florida Caribbean News.

As Black communities become increasingly marginalized, it is important to be reminded of traditions that have brought people together for centuries. Whether it be a backyard cookout, a Sunday morning church service, or a gathering under a tree to listen to the latest stories, connection has always been at the center of the Black community.

Artists and designers: Germane Barnes, Darius V. Daughtry, David I. Muir, Adler Guerrier, Olalekan Jeyifous, Adrienne Chadwick, Marlene Brunot, and George Gadson, were invited by the exhibition’s curator, Dominique Denis, to explore the Sistrunk neighborhood to better understand the relationship its residents have with the built environment. Through art and design conceived or reimagined for this show, they present a tapestry of work reflecting past and present realities.

“Public spaces are inhabited and experienced differently within the Black community, so it was important for this exhibition to showcase the rich history and culture of the people of Sistrunk,” said Denis, who curated the exhibition and is a project manager for Broward County’s Public Art & Design program.

A main goal of the exhibition is to bring about a better understanding of this historical Black community and to inform the type of public art projects best suited for the area. The exhibition is conceptually centered around two staples of most Black neighborhoods: the gathering place and the back alley.

The Porch is the Tree is the Watering Hole is an introspection and investigation meant to highlight the Black experience in Black neighborhoods.

via broward artscalendar.

Beatriz Santiago Muñoz – Thinking with Places and Objects, on Promise No Promises!

Promise No Promises!, a podcast, opens a new chapter called Feminisms in the Caribbean. In this episode, curator and writer Sonia Fernández Pan talks with artist Beatriz Santiago Muñoz.

Promise No Promises! is a podcasts series produced by the Womxn’s Center for Excellence, a research project between the Art Institute and the Instituto Susch—a joint venture with Gra?yna Kulczyk and Art Stations Foundation CH. The Womxn’s Center for Excellence is conceived as a think tank tasked to assess, develop, and propose new social languages and methods to understand the role of women in the arts, culture, science, and technology, as well as in all knowledge areas that are interconnected with the field of culture today.

Related : Gosila, 10 – 25 November, 2018.

Teresita Fernández, Maelstrom

Teresita Fernández discusses her solo exhibition Maelstrom and the key topics it unravels in relation to its central theme: the enduring violence and devastation ignited by colonization in the Caribbean. The arist invites viewers to reconsider the region and the erasure of its past in order to develop a deeper understanding of place, identity, and history. Film by Rava Films. via Lehmann Maupin.