{"id":7523,"date":"2020-05-26T13:57:11","date_gmt":"2020-05-26T13:57:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=7523"},"modified":"2020-05-26T13:58:14","modified_gmt":"2020-05-26T13:58:14","slug":"maurice-evans-and-grace-kisa-bring-nu-africans-to-hammonds-house-museum","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=7523","title":{"rendered":"Maurice Evans and Grace Kisa Bring Nu Africans to Hammonds House Museum"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Shantay Robinson\u00a0<\/span><\/pre>\n<\/p>\n
Historically black women in the United States have been degraded based in many systems of oppression. Controlling images depict black women as angry, promiscuous, and domineering. These images have appeared for centuries and they limit the extent to which black women can exist in this country. But <\/span>Nu Africans<\/span><\/i>, a new body of work by Maurice Evans and Grace Kisa spin this long-lasting narrative on its head with images of black women as creator, warrior, and queen. The powerful body of work, a collaborative effort by Evans and Kisa, currently on view at the Hammonds House in Atlanta, Georgia is treading unprecedented territory as it opens in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. But the artists, along with the staff at Hammonds House are making do with what they have. On Friday, May 15 the exhibition opened virtually to the public through the Hammond House\u2019s virtual portal. Leatrice Ellzy, Executive Director of the Hammonds House sat down for a brief talk that introduced the work while DJ Salah Ananse spun Afro Beat as they transitioned from talking to viewing. The works stood out as confident and impressive, as Evans and Kisa commented on the origins of most of the artworks.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nNu Africans is a concept over twenty-five years in the making. Evans and Kisa attended the Art Institute of Atlanta together when the conversation between them started. They talked about the differences between African and African Diasporic cultures, as Evans is African American and Kisa is Kenyan. Evans was curious as to why Africans on the continent don\u2019t refer to themselves as black and why black people throughout the diaspora would deny their linkage to Africa. Evans explains this disjuncture as a playground affair where kids start \u201cbeef\u201d with hearsay, but in the case of African peoples, it is the white man who is in the middle of misrepresenting Africans on the continent as uncivilized and African Americans as lazy. These misrepresentations cloud our understanding of the similarities we have and highlight the differences between us creating a rift in our acceptance of one another. The goal for the <\/span>Nu Africans<\/span><\/i> is to start a conversation among African Diasporic peoples, so that we may come to understanding our differences as well as our similarities. Evans offers, \u201cI think once we are cool with ourselves and the way we identify ourselves, I think it will only benefit us and Africans at the same time.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n