{"id":6096,"date":"2019-11-12T14:01:01","date_gmt":"2019-11-12T14:01:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=6096"},"modified":"2019-11-14T03:13:15","modified_gmt":"2019-11-14T03:13:15","slug":"smokestacks-in-the-distance-environmental-racism-afrofuturism-and-najee-dorseys-poor-peoples-campaign","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=6096","title":{"rendered":"Smokestacks In The Distance: Environmental Racism, Afrofuturism, And Najee Dorsey’s “Poor People’s Campaign”"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Ice Cream Melting by Najee Dorsey<\/p><\/div>\n

Smokestacks In The Distance: Environmental Racism, Afrofuturism, And Najee Dorsey\u2019s \u201cPoor People\u2019s Campaign\u201d<\/h2>\n
by Faron Manuel<\/pre>\n<\/div>\n

Grappling with the major environmental issues of today, and their centralized effects on poor and African American communities, the series <\/span>Poor People\u2019s Campaign <\/span><\/i>by Najee Dorsey, evokes both Afrofuturist, and southern nostalgic themes, to render what, in Dorsey\u2019s estimation\u2014 \u201ccould potentially be our shared future.\u201d In a since, this body of work presents a challenge to general notions of the Afrofuturist imagination, by grounding visuals of a more recognizable future in present conditions, forecasting a possible time to come. Evolving his approach to digital collage, Dorsey uses primarily original, candid photographs to forge this vision. As he highlights many of the harmful, yet presently normalized environmental factors that we as a society have grown accustomed to. Using the south as his point of departure, these works depict Dorsey\u2019s somewhat distant vision of a future, that remains true to southern narratives, in rural landscapes.<\/span><\/p>\n

“In my #poorpeoplescampaign I’m exploring environmental racism and how it lives in plain sight among poor and marginalized<\/span> communities in the South” — Najee Dorsey<\/span><\/em><\/p>\n

Initially known as a painter, and collagist, Dorsey embraced the idea of creating art in the digital space in 2010, beginning to experiment with the medium after buying a printer, to simply make edition art prints. Admittedly, he states \u201cmy first impression of digital was that it was \u2018cheating\u2019, until I realized that it required the same application of color, line, texture, as with any other media. I realized it was just another vehicle for my artistic expression.\u201d With this acceptance of this new media approach, he completed the <\/span>Resistance<\/span><\/i><\/a><\/span> series<\/span> (2011 – 2012), a body of work inspired by the history of protests against \u201cthe powers that be\u201d (Hill, 2013) on a range of different social issues in the United States. In an artist talk on the works, at Syracuse University\u2019s Community Folk Art Center, Dorsey detailed his then recently evolved views on working in digital\u2014simply stating, \u201cIf you think it’s easy, try it!\u201d Yet and still, this body of work [<\/span>Resistance<\/span><\/i>] was composed of images made with a mix of old, and new media techniques\u2014as at the time his artistic practice was anchored in painting, and collage. After beginning to work in digital, he would still heavily emphasize his use of painting, and collaging by hand, infusing these staple approaches into his digital collage pieces\u2014in a sense, representing a reluctance to let his digital work stand on its own.<\/span><\/p>\n

Though the art world at large has been slow to embrace new media out right, Dorsey has grown ever more comfortable with making in the digital space, as <\/span>Poor People\u2019s Campaign<\/span><\/i>, a series of complexly layered collages that challenge notions of both artistic production, and Afrofuturism\u2014are devoid of any manual embellishments like painting, and the addition of found objects. Representing Dorsey\u2019s first body of work that is totally digital, additional attention has been given to evoking a sense of texture, and depth to a medium that is generally regarded to produce \u2018flat\u2019 images. Then too, works in this new series largely center original candid photographs, featuring children\u2014which visually conveys a more natural context, that alludes to a time to come. Named for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.\u2019s Poor People\u2019s Campaign (King, 2010, p.xx), works in the series also connect to King\u2019s fervent struggle against what he deemed \u201cthe triple evils\u201d\u2026\u201dof racism, materialism, and militarism,\u201d (King, 2010, p.xvi) iniquities that are highlighted symbolically in several of the works throughout the series.<\/span><\/p>\n

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Southern Futurist Over Civil War Soil (2019), Najee Dorsey<\/p><\/div>\n

Though this new body of work harkens on similar themes of locality, and social concern found throughout Dorsey\u2019s artistic practice, the ways in which the candid figure is centralized has a way of giving a voice to the common individual\u2014enabling the everyman\/woman\/child to participate in the dialogues that are necessary to revitalize the community. As these fragmented renderings of youths, posited essentially in a post apocalyptic wasteland, brings the viewer to recon with \u201cwhat\u2019s happening in plain sight.\u201d With works like <\/span>Southern Futurist Over Civil War Soil <\/span><\/i>(2019) highlighting not only the effects of war, and unhinged destruction of our environment, but also forecasts attempts to hold on to past and current racial arrangements long into the future. As well, visually, the cast of candid figures, foregrounding smoldering forestry, toxic plumes and chemical emissions saturating the air, a toppled Civil War monument among the heaping debris; gives way to a visually captivating narrative about a possible future. Augmented by heavy layering, a great degree of color saturation, and complexly collaged figures\u2014as a complete image this work not only provides a relevant narrative, but also speaks to the meticulousness of Dorsey\u2019s new media works.<\/span><\/p>\n

In digital, Dorsey\u2019s approach to figuration is grounded in posture, and body language. As he overlays like poses from various subjects, from either sourced or original photographs to establish integral figures\u2014imbuing them with very pronounced personalities. Then too, in the construction of these figures, there is great attention payed to wardrobe, as Dorsey uses dress to signify time, and status\u2014bearing in mind that these ensembles are largely birthed out of the artist\u2019s imagination. An example of his building of anatomy, and wardrobe to convey time and persona can be gleaned in <\/span>Southern Futurist Over Civil War Soil<\/span><\/i> (2019)\u2014when closely observing the girl clad in red, black, and green attire, it becomes clearer that she is a composite figure. Her attire, the result of Dorsey\u2019s artistic license, as he crafts an interpretation of casual dress in a distant time. Additionally, this transposing of the candid figure, into a new environment, and assigning a role within that new environment, has a way of establishing a new identity for the subject all together. As the natural air of the candid figures in this body of work maintains the innocence of childhood in a visible way.<\/span><\/p>\n

As a body of work, <\/span>Poor Peoples Campaign<\/span><\/i> is a loose narrative, focused on recurring figures, and a shared environment in various degrees of decay. Very much in step with the range of social, and aesthetic commitments made clear in Dorsey\u2019s general body of work. These images also pay homage to his personal history, and artistic influences. Dorsey, states how in his work, \u201cI want to be true to the themes of my work, southern culture, family\u2026it\u2019s about how we live, the environment, there\u2019s a certain nostalgia to it,\u201d (Dorsey, 2018)\u2014mirroring one of his greatest artistic influences, Romare Bearden, a master collagist, who also drew on recurring imagery, and folklore from his upbringing, and community. (Holmes, 2017) With works like Conjur Making That Long Arduous Access to Something Universal <\/i>(2019), highlighting the power of faith, and the collective imagination to overcome despair\u2026Dorsey has presented the Conjur Woman as a recurring figure, and force in a number works over the years\u2014noting how her presence in his work has always served as a nod to Bearden.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

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Conjur Making That Long Arduous Access to Something Universal (2019), Najee Dorsey<\/p><\/div>\n

Though it may not be apparent at a glance, <\/span>Poor Peoples Campaign<\/span><\/i> is imbued with elements of Dorsey\u2019s personal narrative, and family history as well. As <\/span>Summer <\/span><\/i>(2019) which centers three youths, two on bikes, and a third preparing for a swim in a polluted lake. Panning away from these central figures, the source of the lake\u2019s defacement is revealed in the distance\u2014a lakeside factory with a steady flow of emissions rushing from its smokestack. According to the artist, this factory in the distance is a sourced image of a sugar refinery in Napoleonville, Louisiana\u2014an image he came across while tracing some of his family roots to a sugar plantation in the area. According to Dr. Robert Bullard, Distinguished Professor of Urban Planning and Environmental Policy at Texas Southern University:<\/span><\/p>\n

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Summer (2019), Najee Dorsey<\/p><\/div>\n

Many of the polluting industries are located next to African American communities that were settled by former slaves\u2014areas that were unincorporated and in which land was cheap. Local residents had few political rights (most blacks were denied the right to vote or to hold public office). Although the promise of jobs was the selling point for industries coming to towns along the Mississippi River, only a few jobs were offered to African American residents\u2014and these were usually the lowest paying and dirtiest jobs.<\/span><\/p>\n

Louisiana is a poor state. However, many of the giant corporations that operate get special tax breaks. For example, thirty large corporations\u2014many of which are major polluters\u2014received $2.5 billion in Louisiana property-tax exemptions in the 1980s. (Bullard, 2000, p.105)<\/span><\/p>\n

Given the personal nature of some of the elements in the work, the facts bear out that <\/span>Poor People\u2019s Campaign<\/span><\/i> sheds light on the environmental realities of African American, and poor communities across the United States. In personalizing the works, Dorsey also notes how, though the series is grounded in a possible future, and serve as a challenge to issues of climate change\u2014he still received much of his inspiration for the children at leisure, and landscapes in these works from the scenes he saw growing up in Blytheville, Arkansas. Noting how, \u201cthere is not much representation of the south in Afrofuturist creations.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n

In the works, what seem to be the interplay between the nostalgic, and the Afrofuturist\u2014as well as leisure in the midst of despair, evokes notions of duality. Still, Dorsey insists that, \u201cit\u2019s not necessarily that my work deals in duality\u2026it only appears that way when you reveal what\u2019s hidden in plain sight.\u201d As he desired to create a body of work that gave southern black folks a voice in the Afrofuturist genre. Though as a cultural aesthetic, the concept of Afrofuturism has long been a part of Black popular culture\u2014the term \u2018Afrofuturism\u2019 was coined in 1994 by Mark Dery. (Scott, 2019) Dery making the observation that,\u00a0<\/span>few African Americans write science fiction, a genre whose close encounters with the other\u2014the stranger in a strange land\u2014would seem uniquely suited to concerns of African American novelists? Yet, to my knowledge, only Samuel R. Delaney, Octavia Butler, Steve Barnes, and Charles Saunders have chosen to write within the genre conventions of science fiction. This is especially perplexing in light of the fact that African Americans, in a very real sense, are the descendants of alien abductees; they inhabit a sci-fi nightmare in which unseen but no less impossible force fields of intolerance frustrate their movements; official histories undo what has been done; and technology is too often brought to bear on black bodies. (Dery, 1994, p. 107-108)<\/span><\/p>\n

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Stars and Stripes (2019), Najee Dorsey<\/p><\/div>\n

This notion of \u2018technology\u2019 in the form of invasive industry destroying the environment, and therefore the society\u2019s most vulnerable inhabitants is referenced in <\/span>Stars and Stripes<\/span><\/i> (2019). A depiction of a nation as a dystopian theme park, that has become so consumed with amusement, and consumerism that it has rendered the world unsalvageable. Yet and still, this loose visual narrative also features an evident dues ex machina, that weaves all the works together, by introducing a common resolve, with <\/span>The Gospel Spoke of A Redeemer<\/span><\/i> (2019). An image of a young girl as a savior figure, donning a honeycombed halo, and accompanied by an army of bees, in the midst of a scorched earth\u2014all symbolic of her revitalizing attributes.<\/span><\/p>\n

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The Gospel Spoke of A Redeemer (2019), Najee Dorsey<\/p><\/div>\n

With all things considered, in this body of work, Najee Dorsey has configured an Afrofuturist visual narrative, that outlines our seemingly impending future, caused by the advent of modern technology\u2014in the form of environmentally harmful industry. All while providing depictions of environmental issues affecting poor folks in the south, within an Afrofuturist context. Then too, visually compelling imagery has been used to convey a seemingly bleak narrative. Revealing environmentally harmful factors hidden in plain view\u2014these meticulously configured collage works provide much context for transformative dialogue.<\/span><\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY<\/b><\/p>\n

Books<\/b><\/p>\n

Bullard Ph.D., Robert. \u201cDumping in Dixie: Race, Class, And Environmental Quality, Third Edition\u201d (Oxford: Westview Press, Inc. 2000)<\/span><\/p>\n

Dery. Mark. \u201cFlame Wars.\u201d (Durham and London: Duke University Press, 1994)<\/span><\/p>\n

King, Martin Luther. \u201cWhere Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community?\u201d (Boston: Beacon Press, 2010)<\/span><\/p>\n

Catalogs<\/b><\/p>\n

Hill. Kamasi C. \u201cMy Art is My Voice: A Commentary about Najee Dorsey\u2019s series, Resistance\u201d. 2013.<\/span><\/p>\n

https:\/\/najeedorsey.com\/ndors1.1\/index.htm<\/span><\/a> (accessed October 31, 2019)<\/span><\/p>\n

Articles<\/b><\/p>\n

Holmes, Jessica. Romare Bearden: Bayou Fever and Related Works. The Brooklyn Rail. April 2017.<\/span><\/p>\n

https:\/\/brooklynrail.org\/2017\/04\/artseen\/Romare-Bearden-Bayoun-Fever-and-Related-Works<\/span><\/a> (accessed October 31, 2019)<\/span><\/p>\n

Scott, Sydney. A Beginner\u2019s Guide to Afrofuturism: 7 Titles to Watch and Read. Essence Magazine. January 12, 2019.<\/span><\/p>\n

https:\/\/www.essence.com\/entertainment\/a-beginners-guide-afrofuturism\/<\/span><\/a> (accessed on October 31, 2019)<\/span><\/p>\n

Video Interviews<\/b><\/p>\n

Process of Creating Art Najee Dorsey. Black Art In American. YouTube Channel. Published on Nov. 7, 2018<\/span><\/p>\n

https:\/\/m.youtube.com\/watch?v=2x2TRHUfKII<\/span><\/a> (acc<\/span>essed October 31, 2019)<\/span><\/p>\n

Exhibition locations: <\/strong><\/p>\n

Griot Gallery<\/strong>\u00a0 8260 NE 2nd Ave | Miami, FL, 33138 — Art Africa Miami Arts Fair<\/strong> 920 NW 2nd Ave, Miami, FL 33136<\/p>\n

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\"\"Faron Manuel<\/b>\u00a0is an independent curator, and art writer based in Atlanta, Georgia. Since 2016 Faron has also been the coordinator of the Mellon Undergraduate Curatorial Fellowship, and the Mellon Graduate Fellowship in Object-Centered Curatorial Research at the High Museum of Art. Prior to joining the High Museum, he was the Special Projects Curatorial Assistant to the Director of the Clark Atlanta University Art Museum. While at the CAU Art Museum, he curated his first exhibition,\u00a0N\u00e9gritude<\/i>\u00a0(2015)\u2014that explored a French literary and philosophical movement within the African diaspora through art, before receiving his B.A. in History from Clark Atlanta University in 2015. He later served as the Assistant Editor at Black Art In America from 2015-2016, where he regularly interviewed collectors, and reported widely on contemporary art.<\/p>\n

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