{"id":5166,"date":"2019-05-04T11:18:45","date_gmt":"2019-05-04T11:18:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=5166"},"modified":"2019-05-07T13:59:28","modified_gmt":"2019-05-07T13:59:28","slug":"africobra-nation-time-exhibition-at-venice-biennale","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=5166","title":{"rendered":"AFRICOBRA: Nation Time Exhibition at Venice Biennale"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Shantay Robinson <\/span><\/pre>\n <\/p>\n
Curator, Jeffreen Hayes is still in shock that her exhibition <\/span>AFRICOBRA: Nation Time<\/span><\/i> is showing at the 2019 Biennale Arte in Venice. AfriCOBRA (African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists) was founded in 1968 by young black artists who wanted to use the power of visual art to \u201ccommunicate deep meaning\u201d to their community on the South Side of Chicago, Illinois. The collective was integral to the Black Arts Movement in the 1960s and 70s. The five founding members whose work will be in the Venice exhibition are Jeff Donaldson, Wadsworth Jarrell, Jae Jarrell, Barbara Jones-Hogu, and Gerald Williams. Meeting in those early days, the members defined their mission as one that would embody a \u201cBlack aesthetic\u201d and help facilitate black liberation movements. In order to achieve their mission, the collective made their work accessible to the people by creating poster art, in addition to one of their most notable collective works, a radical mural called The Wall of Respect. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nHayes curated the exhibition <\/span>AFRICOBRA: Messages to the People <\/span><\/i>for the Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami that opened in November of 2018 right before Miami Art Basel. Hayes states, \u201cThe response to <\/span>Messages <\/span><\/i>from the people in Miami blew my mind. I wasn\u2019t prepared for that. It was really wonderful. It was like well, this is why I do it.\u201d MOCA-North Miami was so impressed with Hayes\u2019 exhibition, they suggested that they propose an AfriCOBRA exhibition to the Venice Biennale. While working on <\/span>Messages<\/span><\/i>, MOCA-North Miami that has a long history of being an international institution proposed the AfriCOBRA exhibition to Venice. They wanted to use this opportunity to reclaim their status after going through some leadership transitions. Hayes mentions, \u201c[the museum] is one that understands that black art and art by people of color is also on this international and global stage.\u201d Although the Miami exhibition was not yet closed when they applied to Venice, Hayes says she wanted to continue working on another AfriCOBRA exhibition because the collective \u201cmade a very huge impact on, not just African American or black art, but art in general.\u201d She says this is the next chapter of the Miami exhibition because it\u2019s a completely different show. <\/span><\/p>\nThe Venice exhibition is not meant to be a retrospective, though the works in the show range from the collective\u2019s early days to works created as late as 2017. A retrospective would imply that the exhibition included all of the work of the artists who have been part of AfriCOBRA and that\u2019s not the case. Hayes was very cognizant to include the work of the founders in the Venice show because she feels you can\u2019t have an exhibition of the collective without them. But she also wanted to include two early members who have continued the legacy. \u00a0Hayes remarks, \u201cSo, one of the things that is important to the collective and I\u2019m mindful of, is while they\u2019re been working for 50 years, and a lot of exhibitions over the past few years have looked back to those early days, the artists have been very adamant in wanting to present more current work because they\u2019re still alive and they\u2019re still making work.\u201d And although the collective has been together and showing work for 50 years, this is the first time they are presenting work on this global of a stage. Despite the artists being trained as artists, who have BFAs and MFAs and who have engaged with Western art and tradition, the collective wasn\u2019t making art to fit in those spaces. Hayes notes, \u201cThey would show at institutions that were black spaces or had a black curator mainly because of the politics\u2026They weren\u2019t concerned with white art critics because they understood they weren\u2019t going to fully understand what they were making and why they were doing it.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n