{"id":4500,"date":"2018-10-22T18:28:03","date_gmt":"2018-10-22T18:28:03","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=4500"},"modified":"2018-10-22T19:56:59","modified_gmt":"2018-10-22T19:56:59","slug":"artist-on-the-move-lavett-ballard-on-her-work","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=4500","title":{"rendered":"Artist on the Move: Lavett Ballard on Her Work"},"content":{"rendered":"
Artist on the Move: Lavett Ballard on Her Work<\/strong><\/p>\n Lavett Ballard has always been a creative person. Her mother thought she would do something in the arts because of the beautiful mess on her high chair table. She\u2019s been creating art for about twenty years now. But it wasn\u2019t until she met a professional artist, Annie Lee, who encouraged her proclivities, that she made art more than just a hobby.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n She received a dual Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and Art History from Rutgers University in New Jersey. And then she went on to obtain a Master of Fine Arts from University of the Arts in Philadelphia. Going to school showed her how big the art world is. She realized it\u2019s more than the little corner of the world she occupied. She says, \u201c[Going to school] was mind blowing most of the time. When I went into my undergrad program, I had already been selling quite a bit of art and I had a lot of experience showing in local galleries and I kind of went in with a big head. And they were like okay, your art is good, but it can be great.\u201d And she found out that someone out there can really appreciate her work even if they aren\u2019t of the same experience. Although Ballard\u2019s work is based in the female African American experience, even someone of Hispanic heritage or white women can empathize with her.<\/p>\n Ballard\u2019s work is about female identity. She\u2019s currently obsessed with the women in Nina Simone\u2019s song, \u201cFour Women.\u201d Peaches, Saphronia, Sweet Thing, and Aunt Sarah have found a place in her work. She sees how the identities of these four women represent the women of the African Diaspora. Aunt Sarah, the former slave, has seen it all, and is trying to help those coming up behind her. She likens this woman to the women of the Civil Rights Movement who are still alive. Saphronia, a woman of a biracial breeding has a distinct experience coming of age in America, as she has to find out where she fits in the world. \u201cThe Loving Generation\u201d explains the stress related to being biracial. Sweet Thing is reminiscent of the jezebel narrative inflicted on the black female body. But we see her in the Instagram models and video vixens of today. Peaches is a revolutionary. We see Peaches represented by Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors and Opal Tometi, the creators of the Black Lives Matter Movement.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n While most artists are interested in expressing a narrative through their artwork, Ballard\u2019s end goal is to get the viewer to connect with the personages in her collages. She wants you to identify with the gaze of the subject by identifying by seeing your mother and father or aunt and uncle, noticing the look of longing they have in their eyes when they see each other. She wants people of other ethnic backgrounds to understand the concept of colorism in their own communities. Or she would like women of any race to relate to the sexism they experience despite their privilege.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nBy Shantay Robinson\u00a0<\/span><\/pre>\n