{"id":4885,"date":"2019-02-25T14:54:51","date_gmt":"2019-02-25T14:54:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=4885"},"modified":"2019-02-28T17:32:22","modified_gmt":"2019-02-28T17:32:22","slug":"tina-dunkley-a-treasure-trove-of-narratives-at-her-fingertips","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=4885","title":{"rendered":"Tina Dunkley: A Treasure Trove of Narratives at Her Fingertips"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Shantay Robinson<\/span><\/pre>\n <\/p>\n
Tina Dunkley\u2019s life in the arts, as she puts it, \u201cis an issue of DNA.\u201d \u201cI was really born into an incubator relative to family members being creative and making things all the time.\u201d Although her parents were not artists, her mother was a hairdresser and seamstress and her father was a Merchant Marine, her aunts and uncles were always making things and she was usually in tow. So, she didn\u2019t think it was unusual. Dunkley\u2019s grandfather, John Dunkley, whose exhibition received a positive review in <\/span>The New York Times, <\/span><\/i>is one of Jamaica\u2019s nationally celebrated artists. His exhibition <\/span>John Dunkley: Neither Day nor Night <\/span><\/i>will be on view at the American Folk Museum in New York City from October 30 to February 24, 2019, at the same time that Tina Dunkley\u2019s exhibition, <\/span>Sanctuary for the Internal Enemy: An Ancestral Odyssey<\/span><\/i> will be on view at the Wilmer Jennings Gallery at Kenkeleba House from January 16 to March 16, 2019. <\/span><\/p>\nWhen in elementary school, Dunkley would visit the Brooklyn Museum to take painting courses. Then in junior high school, she took printmaking at Pratt. But visual art wasn\u2019t her first love. She wanted to dance. When in junior high school, Katherine Dunham, the renowned African American dancer for whom a technique is named, visited her school and left two provisionary scholarships. Dunkley recalls, \u201cDuring the summer it was six days a week that I danced at her school on 42<\/span>nd<\/span> St. in Manhattan. Two years later, the next thing I knew they put me in <\/span>Aida<\/span><\/i>. [Dunham] had choreographed a section of <\/span>Aida<\/span><\/i> for the Metropolitan Opera and I was in there dancing for the last season of the old Met before it closed.\u201d If she had been aware of the High School for Performing Arts, she would have auditioned. Instead, she attended the High School of Music and Art. But she\u2019s not regretful, \u201cEverything works out the way it\u2019s supposed to because I came [to Atlanta], discovered Atlanta University\u2019s Art Collection, and just went down that rabbit hole for thirty years.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\nDunkley attended Lincoln University in Pennsylvania before transferring to School of Visual Art in New York City. She received her Bachelor of Fine Arts and four months after, moved to Atlanta to attend Atlanta University. She enrolled in the African American Studies program, and her interest was in the curriculum of the African Diaspora. Quite serendipitously the funding dried up for the department, but because she was on scholarship she was able to continue to study. What happened when she was writing her graduate thesis altered the course of black art history. She encountered a collection of artworks by black artists in the basement of the school\u2019s library that had served the university and its surrounding areas for thirty years but hadn\u2019t been shown for about ten. <\/span><\/p>\nIn 1931, Hale Woodruff who had been working and living in Europe was invited by the president of Atlanta University to teach art. While there, Woodruff started the collection in 1942, through annual national juried exhibitions that ran until 1970. Discovering the collection in 1978, Dunkley wrote about it for her master\u2019s thesis and then asked if she could be the curator for the collection. And from 1980 to 1987, that\u2019s what she did until the university got into some financial trouble, and her position was one of the first things to go. On retainer, Dunkley was still able to serve as the steward of artworks that were getting loan requests to be placed in exhibitions because she made the case that no one else on staff was familiar with the collection. After her leave from Atlanta University, Dunkley moved on to Georgia State University Art Gallery at School of Art and Design, (now the Ernest Welch School of Art and Design) under the direction of Larry Walker. During the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, Dunkley produced a project for the Olympics that profiled the Atlanta University Center and the King Center, which helped to obtain a couple million dollars to rehouse the permanent collection in a new University Gallery, now the Clark Atlanta University Art Museum. The president of the university asked that she return to oversee the renovation.<\/span><\/p>\nWhile a student at SVA, Dunkley had no idea the artworks found in Atlanta University\u2019s collection existed. She states, \u201cSo, here I am in the early 70s at SVA, and I\u2019m listening to an art history professor teach, Art Since 1945, and there\u2019s no mention of any artists of color and then I end up down south and there\u2019s this magnificent trove of incredible work by African American artists that these museums and curators know virtually nothing about.\u201d Dunkley had worked with the artworks of many of these master artists as Director of Clark Atlanta University Collection. In reflection she mentions Charles White, Augusta Savage, John Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, and Hale Woodruff. When asked if there is a particular artist who inspires her, Dunkley is apprehensive. She says, \u201cI feel cautious when I answer that question,\u201d as many artists historical, as well as contemporary, move her in their own way. On her discovery of these artists, she says, \u201cI was chasing information, something that I believed existed. And not only did it exist; it existed in astonishing and monumental form. So, we can now observe how it\u2019s just gotten bigger from there with our postmodern artists. God let\u2019s not even go there.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\nWhile working diligently to maintain her career, Dunkley was also a caregiver to her parents. When her mother passed in 2005, she had her last solo show, although in the years between then and now, she\u2019s been a part of several group shows. Though she worked as an art administrator, she never really left her practice behind. Retiring from Clark Atlanta University Art Museum in 2015, allowed her to return whole-heartedly to her artwork. She considers herself a multimedia artist, but she was trained in and has a degree in painting and sculpture. As an undergraduate, she was big into abstraction. But when she moved to Atlanta her work became figurative. Engaging with the people pulled her in the direction of figuration because she was so moved by their narratives. These narratives about people she would encounter became a recurring theme in her work. \u201cAnytime I learn of an amazing story, I\u2019m compelled to respond to it,\u201d she says. <\/span><\/p>\nDunkley received a Kellogg Fellowship for international development in the early 90s where she taught painting and design to marginalized communities of youth in Brazil who were looking for sustainable projects from which they could gain skills to generate income. The fellowship lasted two and half years for which she travelled between Brazil and the United States. Dunkley is inspired by narratives that are uncommon, as she recalls a story told to her during the time she spent in Brazil of how a church was built for and by enslaved Afro-Brazilians. As a conduit or vehicle, the universe allows her to communicate information by listening, interpreting, and transmitting that intelligence.<\/span><\/p>\n