{"id":12620,"date":"2022-06-10T18:16:26","date_gmt":"2022-06-10T18:16:26","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=12620"},"modified":"2022-06-12T11:21:06","modified_gmt":"2022-06-12T11:21:06","slug":"one-of-the-top-black-cultural-events-of-the-decade-happening-juneteenth-pull-up-atlanta-by-debra-hand","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=12620","title":{"rendered":"One of the Top Black Cultural Events of the Decade Happening Juneteenth! Pull Up, Atlanta! By Debra Hand"},"content":{"rendered":"\r\n
By Debra Hand<\/pre>\r\n<\/div>\r\n\r\n\r\nY\u2019all this is BIG! I\u2019ve been pacing the floors, sitting on the edge my seat, then pacing some more. Like a friend of the royal family awaiting the birth of their new heir, I\u2019ve been excitedly anticipating this moment, knowing the importance of its impact on the future of Black culture. Finally, it\u2019s been born and I am ecstatic!<\/p>\r\n
Black Art in America\u2019s new gallery has been born into the rich legacy of Black culture\u2014conceived of in a spirit of deep love for Black art, Black community, Black excellence, and the great ancestors who have consistently made a way for those coming behind them. I feel the arts\u2019 icon, Samella Lewis, smiling! I feel the arts\u2019 institution builder, Dr. Margaret Burroughs, smiling! I feel the renowned arts\u2019 advocate, Eugene Foney, smiling! The list goes on. But most importantly, their work goes on.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n
The opening of this gallery is a proud moment for every Black artist, collector, art enthusiast, cultural warrior, and member of the Black diaspora who understands that the center-piece for our survival as a cultural group relies on our ability to gather together with intention and purpose. It relies on our ability to harness our collective creative potential to affect change in our communities. It relies on our mastery of art and image making to produce narratives that reinforce our beauty, worthiness, and power in the eyes of each other. All of these activities require infrastructure, and, as I once heard Dempsey Travis say, \u201ca place to be somebody.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\r\n
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Dempsey\u2019s expression, presumably, was derived from the play titled, A place to Be Nobody<\/em> written by the Pulitzer Prize winning Black playwright Charles Gordone. Dempsey\u2019s expression offered a brighter take on being Black in America and finally having places where we could feel proud of ourselves as a people. Black Art in America\u2019s huge new gallery space and cultural mecca located in East Point, Georgia, right outside of Atlanta, will certainly provide that \u201cplace to be somebody.\u201d And not just anybody, but somebody who is seeking a deeper look into their own internal value by surrounding themselves with the artistry of those who speak specifically to their existences\u2014their stories, hopes, memories, emotions, traditions, legacies, and projections of what life should be. Black Art in America\u2019s gallery just added mightily to the infrastructure of Black culture\u2019s \u201cplaces to be somebody.\u201d<\/p>\r\n
Nurtured into reality by its dotting father, the renowned artist, Najee Dorsey and his wife, co-partner and co-producer of Black consciousness, Seteria Dorsey, this crown worthy extension of their legacy is a sight to behold. It is gorgeous and it screams Black beauty, pride and excellence from its exterior murals and sculpture gardens, to its interior walls newly appointed with the best of the best art being created by Black artists. The building from outside to inside is a masterpiece designed to steep each visitor in, not just culture, but in the honor of existing in the beautiful Black bountiful hues of \u201cus;\u201d a \u201cplace\u201d where we can be affirmed in the greatness of our humanity, and a \u201cplace\u201d where we can gather, greet, and share moments of cultural relevance to our community.<\/p>\r\n
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It will serve as a cultural mecca. There will be art and conversation, music, and salon talks with artists and collectors, and celebrations. In fact, the first huge celebration will be the actual grand opening on Juneteenth weekend. What a perfect time! On Juneteenth weekend as we commemorate the freedom of our people, we celebrate them with a crowning jewel achievement: Black Art in America\u2019s gallery devoted to showcasing our greatness and who we are continuing to become, thanks to their sacrifices. Standing proudly on almost an acre of land whose soil has surely known the labor of their hands at some point is a place for us to gather in dignity and in celebration of them and each other. This will be so much more than an art gallery.\u00a0<\/p>\r\n
If it were only a new Black art gallery opening up, I would still be excited about the idea of artists having a new place to have their work seen and distributed, but this gallery is not just a business endeavor. This is not just Black entrepreneurship or an additional commercial space. Let me explain why this gallery is so different by repeating a statement I once made and will continue to say over and over until I think every Black person across the globe has heard it loudly and clearly, and that statement is this:\u00a0<\/p>\r\n
The business of Black art and the preservation of Black culture are two very different things, even when the two activities overlap.<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\r\n