{"id":6430,"date":"2020-01-30T22:25:23","date_gmt":"2020-01-30T22:25:23","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=6430"},"modified":"2020-01-31T01:17:54","modified_gmt":"2020-01-31T01:17:54","slug":"arts-power-couple-najee-and-seteria-dorsey-celebrates-10th-anniversary-of-publishing-black-art-in-america-magazine-by-debra-hand","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=6430","title":{"rendered":"\u201cArts\u2019 Power Couple, Najee and Seteria Dorsey, Celebrates 10th Anniversary of Publishing \u2018Black Art in America\u2019 Magazine!\u201d by Debra Hand"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u201cArts\u2019 Power Couple, Najee and Seteria Dorsey, Celebrates 10th Anniversary of Publishing \u2018Black Art in America\u2019 Magazine!\u201d by Debra Hand<\/strong><\/p>\n This is what the Dorseys have done throughout the past ten years. Through continuous personal investment and hard work, they have created one of the foremost leading platforms of Black arts\u2019 advocacy. And that platform is helping to change the culture of mainstream art. It is enabling Black artists and collectors to discover their places in the global conversation of fine art, and it is helping the work of past generation artists to inhabit its long overdue space in America\u2019s art historical canon. For ten years now, BAIA has sounded a message of Black artistic excellence, and has continuously served as a megaphone where the voices of Black artists have been traditionally drowned out by the mainstream art world.<\/p>\n The words \u201cBlack Arts power couple\u201d are not words I toss around easily. This term is reserved for the select few: those couples who not only collect art, but as a result of who they are as a team in life, have created or expanded opportunities for their generations. These couples use their mutual resources, platforms, and influence — to move the entire culture forward. As for the Dorseys, this is in addition to the multitude of artists they have supported directly by collecting their works.<\/p>\n When I say, \u201cBlack arts\u2019 power couple\u201d there is another couple that quickly comes to mind in this category: Kasseem Dean (known as Swizz Beatz) and his wife, the award-winning, Alicia Keys. This Black-Arts\u2019 royal couple are leading the way in creating change for visual artists. Swizz Beatz has taken his arts\u2019 advocacy to the most elite platforms in the mainstream art world (the secondary auction market) as well as to Art Basel, in his efforts to create justice for visual artists. I use the term \u201ccreate justice\u201d because artists cannot achieve justice without first making known some irrefutable issue of unfairness that demands equity as the remedy. In the art world it matters when your voice is one that can influence others to buy art and Swizz Beatz voice is loud and booming in terms of influence. It\u2019s fantastic to know that he is using his platform of notoriety to speak out on issues of unfairness regarding visual artists, and to try to elicit change across the art world. And the art world is paying attention to his influence.<\/p>\n Swizz Beatz and Najee Dorsey ‘No Commission’ Showcase 2018<\/p><\/div>\n A while back, Swizz Beatz was invited to curate Sotheby\u2019s \u201cContemporary Curated\u201d auction according to Sothebys.com. The auction raised just shy of 31 million dollars. I love that Swizz Beatz is zooming-in on the subject of fairness for artists, in addition to his creating exhibits and collecting art as well. Much in the same way, Alicia Keys is using her platform. She has created a community and a platform of opportunities for performing artists and music makers through her \u201cShe Is The Music\u201d organization. Together the couple collects art and are making power moves for the greater good of culture. In my opinion, these are the kinds of investments and sacrifices that place power couples like Swizz Beatz, Alicia Keys, and the Dorseys, topmost in the court of Black art power couples.<\/p>\n As for the Dorseys, creating a significant online presence for Black art on behalf of an entire culture, could not have been an easy feat 10 years ago; especially with so much other Internet content vying for our attention. Even now, content that rises to the top of the public\u2019s interests quickly fades as trends arrive and pass. And there were other challenges for the Dorseys back when they began their publication. Black artists were far from occupying the routine record-setting headlines that we see today. There was no fervor by museums to collect them, as we are seeing now. The Dorseys had to help create the audience for the content they were curating.<\/p>\n Najee Dorsey: Art and Influence, Smart Museum of Art Lecture Hosted by Diasporal Rhythms 2018<\/p><\/div>\n Publishing a magazine solely focused on Black art was not like publishing a magazine about Pop music, for example, where there already existed a wide fan base to immediately appeal to. The subject of Black Art did not necessarily share this kind of broad appeal back then, so it was not just a matter of \u201cbuild it and they will come,\u201d it was more a matter of \u201cbuild it so \u2018it\u2019 can then help build the audience that will finally have a platform to come to.\u201d I absolutely must clarify one thing before I go any further. I\u2019m not saying that there wasn\u2019t an audience for Black art back then because there has always been a Black Art ecosystem filled with Black collectors, long before most mainstream institutions began to take notice of Black art. But\u2026that ecosystem back then still largely existed in fragmented pockets, with little to no centralized repository for thought, content, and information on a web-wide basis. So, outside of frequenting places like the Studio Museum of Harlem, the DuSable Museum, the Museum of Science and Industries annual Black Creativity programs, or the SSCAC (South Side Community Art Center) , and other Black arts institutions, it wasn\u2019t easy for Black artists and collectors to commune as a national cultural force; or to move as a cohesive unit beyond their local regions. This is what made publications like BAIA so timely and critical. Solving this problem of separation was key to forging a new Black Arts\u2019 presence and aesthetic and BAIA was key in helping to bring Black art to the forefront of the global art world by bringing artists, collectors, and cultural enthusiasts together on a single platform where they could participate in the complexity and beauty of their culture, and where they could unapologetically indulge in the visual interpretations of what that means when channeled through the minds and sensibilities of Black artists. I think one of the Dorseys\u2019 greatest contributions to Black culture is their shared vision of how to present Black Art in its finest context. BAIA magazine is filled with vibrant, complex images and narratives that are relevant to a comprehensive understanding of Black culture. Through the years BAIA has shared tens of thousands of images of artwork to highlight the artistic excellence and ingenuity to be found among Black artists.<\/p>\n Queen and I by Najee Dorsey<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n With Najee as the CEO of BAIA, and Seteria Dorsey as the CFO (aka \u2013 the all-in life partner who jumps in where needed to keep the plates spinning and to bridge activities and operations) this power couple is serving Black art on the front lines as it edges into its deserved place of prominence in the canonization of American art. What the Dorseys are doing for Black art is the same thing that the artist and architect, Giorgio Vasari, did in the 16th century when he took it upon himself to create a benchmark for artistic greatness by documenting the biographies of Italian Renaissance artists. In effect, Vasari decided who the masters by selecting certain artists and then laying out their biographies in his book which according to Britannica \u201ccriticized Western art and outwardly favored Tuscan art.\u201d Still, the effect was — Vasari drafted the blueprint for Italian Renaissance scholarship and a reference for artistic mastery that is used even today. Vasari wrote about the culture from which he came and cohesively combined his heritage, and the journeys of all those other artists, into a story that positioned them as an artistic force that \u201creset art history after it had fallen into a dark period,\u201d according to Britannica. In the end, Vasari really just took the initiative to document Italian artists in his way, on his own terms. But, this is really as it should be, in my opinion. Those who know the stories from the most intricate points of view should be the ones recording those stories. It can be reasonably assumed that, even with bias, Vasari\u2019s account of Italian painters contains more associations with the actual truth than any account supplied by a complete stranger to that world. Vasari took it upon himself to position the artists of his culture in the precise way that he wanted them to be known and remembered. He took responsibility for documenting the culture. This has precisely been the work of Najee and Seteria Dorsey. Like Vasari, they are artists who have taken responsibility for documenting the culture from which they\u2019ve risen and they are still laboring to assure it is being positioned in its proper light in the rest of the art world. The Dorseys have long been positioning Black art and artists to be seen, heard, and included in the global conversation of mainstream art. They are both artists who have paid close attention to the story of Black art as it played out in real time. While Seteria currently chooses to devote her artistry to uplifting other artists through her contributions to BAIA, Najee has continued on as a career artist. He has become very well known in the process and his artwork is being hotly coveted and snapped up by collectors and investors. One look at his work and one can certainly see why. It strikes and echoes with both profoundness and beauty. But while Najee Dorsey is successful in ways that most artists can only dream about, it was an interesting journey from the bottom to the top that reads like a great book. This successful artist, turned collector, turned magazine publisher, was a born entrepreneur. A man now in his 40\u2019s, he learned the work ethic of a true hustler as a child. He was about making something happen to avoid financial dependence. <\/a>In the art world, the name Dorsey has been showing up everywhere — from having their art collection exhibited at the Houston Museum of African American Culture \u2013 to Najee Dorsey\u2019s own art work \u201cReturn to Eden #2\u201d being featured in Forbes magazine by Natasha Gural in her coverage of the PRIZM art fair during Art Basel. By the way, the Dorsey\u2019s collection includes works by iconic artists including Elizabeth Catlett, Kerry James Marshall, Faith Ringgold, and Woodrow Nash to name a select few. But today\u2019s headline is all about them as a power couple.<\/p>\n
A big CONGRATS is in order for Najee and Seteria Dorsey! This year marks the 10th Anniversary of their online magazine \u201cBlack Art in America\u201d (BAIA). What a thrill it is to see them cross the threshold into a decade of publishing! BAIA Magazine not only illustrates the Dorsey\u2019s influence as a power couple in the arts\u2019 — but also proves their commitment to culture, and places them firmly in the category of a Black Arts\u2019 power couple that is serving the culture at the highest level, and for the greater good.<\/p>\n
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<\/a> Non-Black collectors also came to BAIA to learn about Black culture and the creative minds currently travelling along its continuum. Today, as back then, BAIA\u2019s readers are able to explore its many articles and podcasts, and learn about Black artists, as well as hear from cultural thought leaders. BAIA not only provides thought provoking, intellectual content for its readers, but it further illuminates the issues that must be addressed in order to position the current Black Arts\u2019 movement within context of the global trends that are underwriting the sudden rise in popularity of Black art.<\/p>\n
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He liked having his own. By middle school he was already showing the hallmarks of an entrepreneurial mastermind when he started selling cinnamon-dipped toothpicks to his classmates. This is a kid who also worked chopping cotton in the South to put money in his pockets. I can only wonder what might have become of a kid with this kind of creativity and drive had not art claimed his passion? What might have become of him had there not been those key moments in his life where an encouraging word was spoken, or where a kind deed was shown him? These are the things Najee thinks about when he reaches back to mentor young people. He remembers those who have impacted him: a Junior high school art teacher named Mrs. Barfield who encouraged Najee to enter a contest where he won an honorable mention; or the time he momentarily drifted away from his passion for the arts and<\/p>\n