{"id":12248,"date":"2022-04-24T18:02:16","date_gmt":"2022-04-24T18:02:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=12248"},"modified":"2022-04-24T18:03:13","modified_gmt":"2022-04-24T18:03:13","slug":"we-all-have-the-same-grandmother-charmaine-minniefields-exploration-of-resistance-and-reverence-through-indigo-the-ring-shout-and-the-praise-house","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=12248","title":{"rendered":"\u201cWe All Have the Same Grandmother\u201d: Charmaine Minniefield\u2019s Exploration of Resistance and Reverence through Indigo, the Ring Shout, and the Praise House"},"content":{"rendered":"\r\n
by Trelani Michelle<\/pre>\r\n\u201cWe all have the same Grandmother,\u201d a sister in The Gambia told Charmaine Minniefield during her residency in the West African country. Home to a stretch of beaches along its Atlantic coastline and known for its peanut production, The Gambia is also home to Jufureh, the reputed ancestral village of Kunta Kinte from Alex Haley\u2019s bestselling novel-turned-movie, Roots<\/em>.<\/p>\r\n
While many of us Netflixed and chilled during the quarantine, Charmaine was stranded in The Gambia for 14 months. \u201cIt turned into a life-changing experience,\u201d she said. \u201cWhile there, I used the time to do an artist residency and go deep inside of exploring and searching for evidence of my family’s traditions.\u201d That search included an exploration of indigenous pigments of indigo and a style of dance that registered itself as familiar to her spirit and memory.<\/p>\r\n
These experiences inspired her to create a series of paintings called Indigo Prayers: A Creation Story. <\/em>According to Emory\u2019s Michael C. Carlos Museum, Indigo Prayers<\/em>, which the museum is exhibiting until September 11th<\/sup> of this year, \u201cbuilds on an ongoing exploration of the Ring Shout, an African-American practice of resistance whose West African origins predate enslavement. This full-bodied rhythmic prayer was taught to Minniefield by her great-grandmother. It was performed by her ancestors during enslavement as a way to secretly preserve their African identity.\u201d<\/p>\r\n
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The preservation of identity and tradition is an act of resistance, which Charmaine often speaks of. Resistance. We hear that word so often in activist spaces, I wanted to be sure that the meaning wasn\u2019t overlooked or assumed. I asked her what her work resisted. \u201cErasure,\u201d she answered. \u201cResisting erasure from revisionist history or contemporary landscape by violence against black and indigenous people.\u201d<\/p>\r\n
Ora Lee Fuqua is Charmaine\u2019s referenced great-grandmother. She was born in Kentucky then migrated to Indiana where Charmaine was born. Most likely, Ora Lee learned the Ring Shout from an elder woman in her own family or community who learned it the exact same way. Through the Pentecostal movement, Ora Lee taught her great-granddaughter Charmaine how to shout.<\/p>\r\n
\u201cThe Ring Shout itself was an act of resistance by remembering. For me, it also defied so many levels of efforts of erasure; it just resisted. We could not have drums, because it was a form of communication, so we created wooden floors that were communal drums. And we created a whole new technology for communication with a full body and rhythmic movement and stomping. The floor was the drum and the entire room was the instrument. And we moved counterclockwise in unison and created community and harmony. And we moved with collective intention, and that prayer was a remembrance of ourselves, our African identity. For me, it’s a bridge. In some traditions, it’s called Ashe or Power or Holy Ghost.\u201d<\/p>\r\n
On Sunday, April 24th<\/sup>, Charmaine will be in Harlem at the Apollo Theater Soundstage, sharing the history of the Ring Shout and how she\u2019s integrating the tradition into her artistry. The event is titled Resistance and Healing: Engaging the Ring Shout<\/em> and includes a film short, a panel discussion, and a performance of the Ring Shout by Creative Outlet Dance Theater of Brooklyn. The program closes with the audience joining in the Ring Shout for a transformative experience.<\/p>\r\n
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\u201cI\u2019m looking forward to being in that part of the planet. That power center of black narratives,\u201d Charmaine said, describing Harlem. \u201cThe last time I was in New York, I painted a mural of Harriet Tubman on Harriet Tubman Way. We didn’t know that we were painting it on Harriet Tubman Way. The design and selection of the mural location, all of that was all unrelated. And then the neighbors are the ones who came, those who have been pushing back against gentrification in that area, and were excited to see black faces on those walls.<\/p>\r\n
I am grateful for that, and that memory of Harriet Tubman. And we did Maya Angelou and we did Bessie Coleman, on a big vibrant patch of African fabric. And then I went to The Gambia, and it’s just to think about the power of our ancestors into this moment and even as events have taken place that have taken the lives of our people, we invoke their power and their prayer for our lives again. And that\u2019s also the Ring Shout, reminding us of ourselves, our own body.\u201d<\/p>\r\n
The concept of the body can refer to one\u2019s physical anatomy or an organized collective such as the church body or the school body. Leaning on the latter, Charmaine is participating in Sacred Spaces: Belief and Belonging<\/em> at The Penn Center on St. Helena Island, South Carolina on Saturday, April 30th<\/sup>. Founded in 1862, the Penn Center started off as one of the first schools for black folk in the South. After the school closed in 1948, it became a gathering space for activists like Martin Luther King, Jr. then later a museum and cultural center to preserve the history and culture of the Gullah Geechee community. In addition to Charmaine, panelists also include Natalie Daise, Melissa L. Cooper, and Griffin Lotson.<\/p>\r\n