FORBES Nov 25, 2018

Museum Of Contemporary Art North Miami Shines New Light On AfriCOBRA

Nelson Stevens, “Homer da Brave”, 1972 Silkscreen PHOTO COURTESY:NELSON STEVENS/ ROSE BLOUIN

Nelson Stevens, “Homer da Brave”, 1972 Silkscreen

PHOTO COURTESY:NELSON STEVENS/ ROSE BLOUIN

Chadd Scott Contributor

Arts

I cover the intersection of art and travel.

You would need to be a serious student of modern American art to be familiar with AfriCOBRA. Fifty years after the black artist collective that defined the visual aesthetic of the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s and 1970s was founded; the Chicago-based artists are receiving fresh attention.

Founded in 1968 by Jeff Donaldson, Jae Jarrell, Wadsworth Jarrell, Barbara Jones-Hogu and Gerald Williams, AfriCOBRA, which stands for the African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists, created defining images for the visual aesthetic of the Black Arts Movement.

In celebration of Miami Art Week 2018, the Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami will present an exhibition celebrating the founding of AfriCOBRA, AfriCOBRA: Messages to the People, on view from November 27, 2018 through April 7, 2019.

“North Miami, MOCA’s home, is a majority-minority city, a microcosm of the diversity of Miami as a whole and represents the city’s largely African and Caribbean-American demographics,” MOCA North Miami Executive Director Chana Budgazad Sheldon said. “MOCA strives to feature exhibitions that connect the interests of our diverse community with important, historic contemporary art movements. The exhibition AfriCOBRA: Messages to the People does just that.”

Gerald Williams, Angela Davis, 1971 Acrylic on canvas-60 x 60 in. (152 x 152 cm)

PHOTO COURTESY: GERALD WILLIAMS / KAVI GUPTA

This exhibit takes on special meeting for Sheldon who was named the museum’s director in January of this year. AfriCOBRA: Messages to the People represents the institution’s first exhibition under her directorship. Why did she choose this subject to launch her tenure?

This exhibit honors the importance of AfriCOBRA’s role in American art history. AfriCOBRA was founded in a time when there weren’t enough images of Black people that were positive. The movement is about presenting positive black figures with gorgeous colors, and creating community through art. The founders, like many artists of the 1960s and 1970s, understood that their artistic voices could contribute to the liberation and unifying the Black community as a whole. The vision these artists created went on to help define the aesthetic of the Black Arts Movement – and the works are just as relevant and impactful today as they were when they were made.

AfriCOBRA: Messages to the People brings together the founding artists with five early members, Sherman Beck, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Omar Lama, Carolyn Mims Lawrence and Nelson Stevens, to look back at their contributions to the shaping of AfriCOBRA while presenting the artists’ current works of art. These ten artists provided an artistic foundation from which the group evolved over time through the guiding philosophy of art for the people, art that appeals to the senses, and art that is inspired by African people.

What do visitors have to look forward to in the exhibit?

“Visitors will be surprised to see how deeply connected aesthetically and philosophically AfriCOBRA was and that it continues to this day, and the diversity of works of art–from painting, sculpture, fiber and textiles,” exhibit curator Jeffreen M Hayes said. “They will also be surprised to learn how the collective created a visual language from Black life and culture of the 1960s and 1970s that resonates in our contemporary moment.”

The exhibit’s timing coincides with Miami becoming the center of the art world December 6 through 9 as Art Basel Miami Beach arrives bringing over 200 of the world’s top modern and contemporary art galleries displaying work from over 4,000 artists–along with thousands of visitors–to the Miami Beach Convention Center. Numerous museums, galleries, restaurants, and hotels in the area will be hosting events aimed at the Art Basel crowd.

Wadsworth Jarrell, Black Family, 1968 Acrylic, graphite, and wax on canvas-46 x 36 in. 117 x 91 cm)

PHOTO COURTESY: WADSWORTH JARRELL / KAVI GUPTA

MOCA North Miami is joined in recognizing AfriCOBRA artists by the Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago which has on view until December 30th The Time is Now! Art Worlds of Chicago’s South Side, 1960-1980. The exhibition features approximately 100 objects including art and ephemera associated with a variety of Black arts movements including AfriCOBRA.

Founded 50 years ago, AfriCOBRA’s message remains relevant.

“AfriCOBRA is more than a collection of art, it speaks to the social and political challenges Black people still face today,” Hayes said. “Black art is significant to American culture and I am proud to bring this important topic to the forefront through this exhibition at MOCA.”

THE ART NEWSPAPER

AfriCOBRA: Messages to the People

Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami, until 7 April 2019

When five black artists from Chicago formed AfriCOBRA (the African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists) in 1968, they sought “to address conditions we were experiencing in our lives, in our positions in the world, and the politics of the nation,” says Jae Jarrell, one of the collective’s co-founders. “There was much we could do as artists to give a voice to that.” The Museum of Contemporary Art (MoCA) North Miami is amplifying that voice with an exhibition celebrating the 50th anniversary of the group. AfriCOBRA’s goal was to “bring uplift to the community”, Jarrell says. And they set about this by using what was to become the group’s visual calling card—bright “cool-ade” colours— and by creating positive representations of the Black community. “[We] needed a correction of our people seeing themselves in the art,” she says. The show presents work in multiple media, from sculpture and printmaking to fashion, by Jarrell and her co-founders—her husband Wadsworth, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Gerald Williams and Jeff Donaldson—as well as pieces by five other early members.

North Miami

AfriCOBRA 50th Anniversary at MOCA

AfriCOBRA, the pioneering black artist collective that originated in Chicago, is celebrating its 50th anniversary with a show at the Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami (MOCA). “AfriCOBRA: Messages to the People” features work from the movement's founding members—Jae Jarrell, Wadsworth Jarrell, Barbara Jones-Hogu and Gerald Williams—and five early members—Sherman Beck, Napoleon Jones-Henderson, Omar Lama, Carolyn Mims Lawrence and Nelson Stevens—created both in the early days of AfriCOBRA and more recently. As such, the show serves as a demonstration of the group's evolution as well as a sort of referendum on surrounding culture over the past 50 years. 770 NE 125th Street. Through April 7. mocanomi.org

NYT Style Magazine

Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami

The museum’s permanent collection includes works by a broad range of contemporary artists, including the Miami-based sculptors Teresita Fernández and Pablo Cano, and year-round, the popular “Jazz at MOCA” outdoor concert series takes place on the last Friday of every month. But this season’s big draw is the “Messages to the People” exhibition, which runs from November through early April, a retrospective of the works of 10 AfriCobra artists, including Jae Jarrell, Barbara Jones-Hogu, Jeff Donaldson and Carolyn Lawrence. The AfriCobra movement — African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists — was founded by a group of African-American artists in Chicago fifty years ago to shine a light on work by artists of color.

https://worldredeye.com/2018/12/africobra-messages-people-artist-reception/