Showing posts with label Seasoned en Vieux exhibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seasoned en Vieux exhibition. Show all posts

Saturday, January 24, 2015

So You Know...

 
I thought this was an incredibly touching and reflective piece by Mr. Tyler Perry.
Tyler Perry
 

Hey guys,
Yes, this is a long one but don’t act like you don’t have two minutes to read it. LOL.
 
I remember being a very young little boy going to visit my Grandmother. Everybody called her Aunt May. It was always a trip I enjoyed because she had the most interesting things around her house. She had things I had never seen before, like an old washing machine on the back porch where you fed clothes through the wringer. I got my hand caught in it one time; not a good feeling, lol. I also remember her wood stove and her outhouse. She didn’t have indoor plumbing at the time. When I would arrive there with my parents I would jump out of the car, run past the chickens, and up the old wooden steps into the old rundown 4 room house. It looked to be leaning from the outside, and on the inside, there was newspaper stuffed in the cracks of the wall. I loved the faces on the black and white comics hanging out of the walls. It made my heart happy, but my hands would get slapped if I pulled them out, especially in the winter. I didn’t know that was the insulation. The house had no heat. In the front room of the house there was this very old man in a bed. His skin was like bronze, and to my little boy eyes, it looked like a million wrinkles ran through it. When he would open his eyes, I’d see that they were grey and faint. His name was Papa Rod. That’s all I knew about him until I was told that he was born a slave. Of course, I didn’t know what that meant at the time. I was too busy studying the quilt that was covering his body to pay attention, to tell you the truth. This quilt looked as if it had millions of colors and millions of patches to my little boy eyes. I thought to myself, “that is an ugly quilt? Why didn’t my Grandmother go to Kent’s or TG&Y (if you know these stores you’re telling your age, lol) and get a good quilt like my mamma had? What is this raggedy thing?” Later on that night, when we would go to bed, my Grandmother would bring lots of these homemade quilts that she had made from her old dresses and scraps and put them on the bed for us. I thought to myself, “all these quilts are ugly, they smell like mothballs, but my it sure is warm.”  
 
When I was about 21 I decided to move away, and guess what, here came my mother giving me one of my Grandmother’s quilts. By then, I had an appreciation for the hard work that went into making it. So, I appreciated it, but I was still a bit embarrassed by it. I took the quilt with me to Atlanta. I not only used that quilt to keep me warm at night, especially when I was sleeping in my car, but I used it when I had to get on the ground to work on my car. Now don’t get me wrong, it was special to me because my Grandmother had made it, but when you’re in a struggle nothing has much value. So, I would use it for whatever and whenever I needed it. Most of the time it was thrown in the trunk for wrapping tools or thrown in the closet until I needed it.  
 
Not long after I moved to Atlanta things got really bad. I remember coming home from work one day. I was behind on my rent, and the sheriff had evicted me and set all my things out on the street in the rain. I drove up shocked, and I got out of the car trying to get all the things of value that were left that my neighbors hadn’t picked through. In my mind, they had taken everything of value, but there on the ground was my Grandmother’s quilt. I used it as a bag. I put as many of my clothes in it that I could and stuffed it into the car and left. I went to a storage company and put what few things I had left in storage and started trying to find a place to live. 
 
Stay with me. I’m going somewhere with this. A few months later, I couldn’t afford to pay the storage bill. So, I just let it go, losing everything in storage including the quilt.
 
Now, let me take you to my deeper point. A few years ago, I saw a familiar looking quilt. It looked just like the ones that my Grandmother had handmade. It brought back so many memories. I knew it wasn’t the same quilt, but I also knew that somebody’s grandmother or great-grandmother had made that quilt and I was embarrassed that they had taken such good care of it. As I was studying the lines and the stitching I got a lump in my throat. It looked so much like my Grandmother’s work. What was so surprising to me was that the very quilt I thought was so ugly through my little boy eyes, as a man, I realized that I was looking at a masterpiece. I asked the curator about the quilt, and she started telling me the story. This woman, who no doubt didn’t know anything about my Grandmother, was telling me my history. She was describing my Grandmother’s quilt. She said it was made by an African American woman and that her family had kept it for years. All of the fabrics dated back to different times in history. There were patches from dresses and her rags from the civil war to the civil rights era. As I was taking it in, I had to ask her what it was worth. She told me that this quilt wasn’t for sale because the family didn’t want to sell it. They knew the value, but she said you could get a few of these limited and rare quilts with this kind of history for around twelve thousand to one hundred thousand dollars each. My jaw hit the floor. I was so embarrassed that I had this treasure in my house, in my possession, in my life, and I had treated it like a rag. What a lesson for us all.
 
It made me think about us as humans. We are so much more valuable than a material thing, but sometimes in life we have people in our lives that should be treated like treasures. Instead, we discard them and treat them like rags, like my Grandmother’s quilt. We only use them when we need to be warm or comforted. Like that quilt, we think they’re worthless until we need them, and like that quilt, it takes somebody else to point out their value to us after they are gone.  
 
If you are like that quilt, and you are being treated like you don’t matter or being pushed aside and used only when you are needed, stop letting that happen to you. You are worth more than the people that created you know. My Grandmother had no idea that one day her quilts would be worth millions. She had lots of them. She created it and didn’t know, which tells me that it’s possible for your parents not to know that you are a treasure. Like that quilt, you are beautiful in your patches, and it took all of those patches to make you whole and who you are. Each one of them represents something in your life that you’ve been through. Wear them with pride. Like that quilt and its thread, something held you together through it all. Like that quilt, even if the people that you give warmth to are not giving you the care you need, you still have value beyond what they know. Like that quilt, you are made from fabrics that have endured and seen more than most people could imagine and you’re still here. Like that quilt, if someone who is immature can’t appreciate your beauty, I’m sure a grown up will. Like that quilt, you are a treasure. Your story matters. I wish my Grandmother’s quilt would have come with a label telling me how special and valuable it was and would be. Then the young foolish man that I was would have known how to handle it, to treat it with care. But unlike that quilt, you have a voice. Use it. Start demanding that you are treated like the treasure that you are!
 
I love you,
 
God bless.
 
Tyler
 
 


 
 






 

Monday, January 5, 2015

Hot Diggity Dog! Seasoned en Vieux extended!

#nomadtheory #music  #arts #nolamusic
Nomad Theory, New Orleans
 
Wonderful news!The exhibition will be extended to January 27th, all thanks to the Dunkin Donuts franchise owners! 

Secondly, we will have the smooth jazz sounds of Nomad Theory performing to round out the event.  The date will be announced shortly.

Sunday, January 4, 2015

En Vieux: The Ties That Bind You

Surrounded By Friends ~Sylvia Simpson





 
 
 
 

Do Not Go~ Susan Charles

 
 
 





 
left to right: Do Not Go, Wise Through Experience & Circles
 
 
 
Wise Throu Experience~Karen Douglas
 
 
 
 
Baobab Tree~Susan Charles
 
 
 
Take Off the Mask~Irma White
 
 
 
 
 
Irma White, artist
 
 
 
Divine Matrix~ Gailene St. Armand (below)


closeup




 
 
 
 
closeup
 
 
 
 
 
 

Quilts by Marietta Johnson (Below)

 
Friendship Dance~Marietta Johnson
 



Love en Deaux 



 
closeup
 
 
Diaspora~ Marietta Johnson
 
closeup
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Treble Clef~Marietta Johnson
 
 
 
Closeup

 
 
 
 
 

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Seasoned en Veux: Like a Kid in a Candy Store

What I am always amazed about is being even more amazed at the talent of the numerous artists, especially those over 60 and the volume, light & display of their talents they dare show. 
 
 
 
 
 
(l to r) Terrence Osbourne's "Uptown House" Aminah Da Da's "Silhouette" (paper quilling) & Silk Rivers Metal's "Cocoon"
 

 
Closeup of "Uptown House" Terrence Osbourne
 
 
"Silhouette" ~ Aminah Da Da (paper quilling)
 
 

 
Aminah Da Da (Top-Bottom) holding some of her Paper Quilling Ornaments
 

Assistant, Slyvia Robinson holding Aminah Da Da's "Silhouette"

 
Paper Quilling Ornaments~ Aminah Da Da




"Friendship Dance" ~ Marietta Johnson closeup
 
 
 


"Friendship Dance"~Marietta Johnson 42x52 Machine quilted
 
 

"Love en Deux"(r) "Friendship Dance"(l) "~Marietta Johnson 42x52 Machine quilted
 

 
 "Diaspora"~Marietta Johnson 42x66 Machine quilted
 

 
"Love en Deux" ~Marietta Johnson 45x52 Machine quilted
 
 
 
 
 
"Treble Clef" ~Marietta Johnson 43x50 (closeup) Machine quilted
 
 
"Treble Clef" ~Marietta Johnson 43x50 Machine quilted

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Hark! Where Goeth Thou?

 
 
 
 

1501 Canal Senior Apts (front view)~JHM©14
 
 

1501 Canal Street. The historic Texaco building now the 1501 Canal Senior Apts & home of the pop up gallery Galerie 1501.


Folks have been asking me where is my art in Seasoned en Vieux.
 
 
Look around, better yet, come on down and you'll see me everywhere. My joy being the curator is seen in the 29 artists.  I will have a small piece or too maybe before the closing celebration on January 10th.
 
This whole venue was done out of love and was borne so my neighbors and the Treme/Canal Street community could have something to look at in this space while we await the future home of Dunkin Donuts.  When the idea that popped up in my head now 4 weeks ago, how little did I know that Galerie 1501 would emerge.
 
With limited time and resoures but a whole lot of heart here we glowed. Anything done with heart and love will have a good effect.
 
 
I always warn people that the faster I speak, my mind is flowing faster when on a creative roll.  We've gotten so much positive feedback on Canal Street! And you can, at least I have plus others who have experience it first hand, see the rhythms change in this so called "dead zone".
 
Artists have an innate sense of creating a happening where they are just simply by being.  Pedastrians who I've watched over the last several months since the 1501 Canal Senior Apts opened now are slowing down, to look.  We've seen many doing double takes.  We have visitors from many places come in to see.
 
Even some whom have never been in a gallery before have cruised through.
 
Michele Lambert with 1920 Downtown Canal Street


 






 

 
Visitors from Montreal & Quebec, Canada plus a local visitor.


 Maureen Rice visiting from NYC with Slyvia Robinson,artist & mother of Terrence Osborne






Dr. Ed Dees (l)

 
 Debra Del Rio, Florida


 
 
 
 
"Three Lions & Singing to the King"~Ransom McCormick

 
 
 
 
 



 
 
"The Bird"~ Jesse Freeman (top)
 
 

 
"Blue in the Face" (top)
 
Violetta Femme (bottom)
 
 
 
Violetta Femme~Jesse Freeman
 
 
 
"The Blues Club"~Jeff Todd
 
 
  
 
 
"Vieux Carre"~Jeff Todd 
 
 


Susan Charles (l) Karen Douglas (C) Marietta Johnson (r)

"Surrounded by Friends" ~Slyvia Simpson
 
 

 
 

 
Marietta Johnson, artist
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
So...pray tell where am I?  You see me in the gallerie:
 




 
and in my 15th floor Vieux of downtown Canal Street:
 
 






 
 
 
 
 
 
And in Chalmette...