<\/a><\/span><\/p>\nTina Dunkley, Arktype Sustenance series: Blessed is the Fruit of Free Labor. \u00a0<\/span>Serigraph, 2015<\/span><\/p>\nFrom 1994 to 1996, she was program manager for African American Culture: An American Experience, a multidisciplinary program of the Cultural Olympiad of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games that included two fine art exhibitions and activities ranging from theater performances to jump-rope demonstrations. Dunkley also co-curated Art in Atlanta, an exhibition by the grassroots organization Artists in Residence International that traveled throughout the Amerika Haus system in Germany during 1996.<\/span><\/p>\nDunkley\u2019s ongoing interaction with African Diaspora\u00a0cultures in Brazil began with a 1991\u20131993 Kellogg Fellowship in International Development and continued with a 2001 travel grant from Georgia-Pernambuco Partners of the Americas. These experiences found their way into Dunkley\u2019s own artworks, as in the 2005 exhibition at Atlanta\u2019s Hammonds House Galleries which included works on Afro-Brazilian history and culturally freighted aspects of her own family\u2019s identity. Dunkley\u2019s exhibition record as a visual artist, combined with her career as curator and scholar, had gained her in 1997 a Governor\u2019s Award for Women in the Visual Arts.<\/span><\/p>\nDunkley\u2019s interaction and research into African Diaspora communities in South America and the Caribbean, from the Maroons of Jamaica to the Quilambolas of Brazil, has recently led to the discovery of her own ancestral heritage in the Merikins of Trinidad, who escaped slavery in the American South during the War of 1812 by joining the British military. In addition to authoring a book on the subject for middle school students, she plans to produce a body of artwork related to the Merikins and her own relationship to them.<\/span><\/p>\nBiography<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\nTina Dunkley is an artist, curator, and gallery director. She has served as the Director of the Clark Atlanta University Art Galleries since 1994. Of the gallery\u2019s two collection categories, African and American, the largest and most historically significant is the American collection comprised mainly of works by African American artists\u2014some 750 works of art spanning eight decades, 1914 to 2010. In 2012, Dunkley published In the Eye of the Muses: Selections from the Clark Atlanta University Art Collection, which commemorates the 70th anniversary of Clark Atlanta University\u2019s historical permanent collection and the 60th anniversary of the unveiling of The Art of the Negro mural series. During the 1996 Olympic Games, Dunkley produced a program highlighting Atlanta\u2019s history for its Cultural Olympiad. An accomplished artist in her own right, Dunkley is presently creating a series of mixed media work that conveys the obscure saga of the Merikins\u2014a tale of 4000 African Americans, who escaped their enslave ment during the War of 1812 by joining the British Royal Navy as Colonial Marines. From 1971 to 1994, Dunkley taught and\/or curated in museum education depart ments, state and municipal art agencies and colleges. Among them were the Brooklyn Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, as well as the Neighborhood Arts Center, the Georgia Council for the Arts, Georgia State University Art Gallery, Atlanta University, and Spelman College in Atlanta. A Kellogg Fellowship in International Develop – ment administered through the Georgia – Pernambuco Partners of the Americas gave her the opportunity to teach art as a skill in fostering sustainable micro enterprises in Brazil. Dunkley resides in Decatur, Georgia.<\/span><\/p>\nArticle from Women’s Caucus for Art<\/a>\u00a0written by Jerry Cullum (2013)<\/p>\n\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nRelated articles:<\/p>\n
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Painting Attributed to Hale Woodruff In High Museum Collection comes into question –\u00a0Read<\/a><\/span><\/p>\n