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HomeArts-Entertainment“BLACKFULLNESS”: An Emancipation 2024 Art Exhibition

“BLACKFULLNESS”: An Emancipation 2024 Art Exhibition

The third annual Emancipation Art Exhibition is set to open on Friday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. at Fort Frederik Museum. This year’s exhibition is entitled BLACKFULLNESS, Commissioner Jean-Pierre L. Oriol of the Department of Planning and Natural Resources announced.

BLACKFULLNESS opens Friday and runs through October. (Submitted flyer)

The group show, curated by Chief Curator Monica Marin of the Division of Libraries, Archives and Museums, invited artists from across the Virgin Islands, the African-Caribbean Diaspora, and/or those connected to the region to submit work, according to the press release.

The exhibition will feature work by Waldermar Brodhurst, Jeffrey Rezende, Victoria Rivera, Elisa Mackay, Danica Davis, Niarus Walker, Adrian Edwards, Ray Llanos, La Vaughn Belle, Quiana Adams, Elwin Joseph, Stuart Rames, Mike Walsh, Danielle Kearns, Rob Gigsun, Therese Trudeau, Eric Paxton, A’we Study Group featuring Sayeeda Carter, Kemit Amon-Lewis, Oceana James, and Nina Mercer, among others, the press release stated.

BLACKFULLNESS is a word coined by the late Black feminist Audre Lorde to describe what she loved about her chosen home of St. Croix. Specifically, her beloved majority Black community gave her a sense of great belonging and purpose that transcended place. In an interview entitled Above the Wind, Lorde speaks to her experience of coming to St. Croix to heal and to be actionable as both an artist and as a human-rights activist. Like Lorde, many creatives from the US have similarly been drawn by the energy of the people of the Virgin Islands, who have served as beacons of light and inspiration, the release stated.

“This year’s exhibition spotlights the spirit of resistance that is at the core of Virgin Islanders’ identity and that is etched into everything that makes Virgin Islands’ cultural production so powerful. It calls attention to how Black protest and art & activism in our region have influenced international Black brilliance and liberation”, stated Marin.

Admission is $10 per person, and students 17 and under are free. There will be additional free viewing on Saturday from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. The show will be up through October during normal Fort Frederik Museum hours: M-F from 9-4:30 p.m.

For questions, please contact Monica Marin at monica.marin@dpnr.vi.gov or 340-772-2021.

 

 

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