SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- The Museum of the African Diaspora is presenting Meet Us Quickly: Painting for Justice from Prison, a digital exhibition of the work of twelve artists incarcerated at San Quentin State Prison. The twenty-one works in the exhibition include linocut prints, acrylic paintings, ink drawings on paper, and collage and are presented with accompanying statements written by each artist, allowing these incarcerated men to speak for themselves and share their vision and perspectives in their own words.
The exhibition, initiated in partnership with Flyaway Productions and Prison Renaissance, is organized and curated by Rahsaan New York Thomas, well known as the co-host and co-producer of the Pulitzer Prize-nominated podcast Ear Hustle. The Brooklyn native is currently incarcerated at San Quentin from where he chairs a chapter of the Northern California Society of Professional Journalists, is a contributing writer for The Marshall Project and San Quentin News, and co-founded Prison Renaissance, a journal and a movement that uses art and community to create a culture of transformation to end the cycles of incarceration.
In Thomas essay The Art of Proximity, included as part of the online exhibition, he writes, How do you get the public to be proximate with people in prison? Immediately art comes to mind. Art because it allows you to turn your most painful experiences into something beautiful. Art because even in prison, you still have freedom of speech, freedom of expression. Art because you see amazing incarcerated painters Bruce Fowler and Lamavis Comundoiwilla and cartoonist Orlando Smith create works worthy of huge commissions for free as acts of remorse. Art because it can be mailed past the bars. Art because its attractive. Art because writing is an art you practice. It has to be art because it has always been art for you.
Eclectic in influence, certain works in this exhibition nod to pointillism and neo-constructivism while others honor the importance of the artists of the Harlem Renaissance.
Gerald Morgan contributes Pyramids, a painting that captures the vision of Aaron Douglas, a 20th century Black artist. Morgan writes, From 1934 to 1936, three of his paintings inspired me to tie his message together on one canvas. The titles are: African Setting 1934, Into Bondage 1936 and Aspiration 1936. Aarons vision of the past and the future continues to unfold today.
Gary Harell, incarcerated for 42 years and counting, blends block printing with pointillism to create vivid portraits including the two works on view in the exhibition, Gary Harell Plays Blues and The Queen.
Orlando Smith, a tattoo artist prior to being given 8 life sentences under the Three Strikes Law, contributes a number of finely detailed graphic novel illustrations, powerfully depicting life behind bars.
Tafka Clark Rockefeller paints oil and acrylics and believes that all art should deliberately and meaningfully break at least one rule. His style, which he calls Neo-Constructivism, is clearly on view in his painting Make Skeletons Dance.
Bruce Fowlers Ruth is a richly painted portrait of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Fowler writes, My inspirations come from internal struggles that haunt me, places I dream of escaping to, and people I admire, which led me to paint Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg. She suffered terrible losses and conquered unimaginable odds to become the most powerful woman in Americaa woman I have great respect for. I am honored to have the opportunity to paint her; this is coming from the most unlikely admirer.
Other artists include Phillip Ansar Anthony Davis, Stan Bey, Ben Chandler, Christopher Khalifah Christensen, Lamavis Comundoiwilla, David Gabriel, and Antwan Banks Williams, co-creator and sound designer of Ear Hustle.