{"id":5373,"date":"2019-06-18T16:22:25","date_gmt":"2019-06-18T16:22:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=5373"},"modified":"2019-06-19T16:48:41","modified_gmt":"2019-06-19T16:48:41","slug":"dreaming-as-i-touch-the-sky-with-lynn-marshall-linnemeier","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=5373","title":{"rendered":"Dreaming As I Touch The Sky With Lynn Marshall-Linnemeier"},"content":{"rendered":"
by Cynthia Short<\/pre>\n<\/p>\n
The thing about history is that it is hardly ever monotone. There are many different impacts of every event; there are numerous sides to even the smallest stories. There\u2019s a certain richness that can\u2019t be conveyed through a single thought process or medium. Artists are individuals who draw and juxtapose the past with the now, until it is realized that they are often one in the same. Multimedia artists are particularly gifted at conveying the depth of this relationship and fairly presenting all its avenues.<\/span><\/p>\n
As illustrated by the artist in question, this practice requires vast cultural knowledge and genuine appreciation of each and every component.<\/span><\/p>\n
Lynn Marshall-Linnemeier was born in Southern Pines, North Carolina, a small resort town in the central area of the state. It was originally named Jim Town and was an early incorporated African American town in North Carolina. Despite the municipality\u2019s discontinued existence, West Southern Pines is still a predominantly African American section of the Southern Pines\/Pinehurst area.<\/span><\/p>\n
As a child, Lynn would create stories of knights, dragons and other supernatural beings in need of saving. She would then use her innate creativity to illustrate these stories. She was \u201calways drawing,\u201d whether in her sketchbook or on her house walls with chalk.<\/span><\/p>\n
Lynn is an honors graduate of the Atlanta College of Art (BFA Photography 1990), with a Masters in Southern Studies from the University of Mississippi. She has taught at Agnes Scott College, Spelman and Emory University. She is experienced in site-specific installations and has done large-scale public artwork, though she is mostly known for her mixed-media artwork. <\/span><\/p>\n
Her hometown has Southern and African storytelling roots, which have greatly inspired her works. Her <\/span>Journey Projects<\/span><\/i> incorporated these themes to create installations. In her blog, she admits to spending most of her life researching \u201cblack sanctuaries\u201d – places formed out of resistance to discrimination and violence, in places like Mound Bayou, Mississippi; Eatonville, Florida; Muguga, Kenya; Adelaide and Point Pearce, South Australia.<\/span><\/p>\n
In these places, black business owners sold food, gas and good times in spite of segregation, Jim Crow laws, and colonization. Later, she realized that she was born in such an area and came to believe that we exist in the somewhat parallel universe that occurs between anthropological science and creativity fueled by memories.<\/span><\/p>\n