![]() |
|||
|
|
Burial Shrines: Florida 1988
was an exceptional year in my life. I had recently relocated to Fort
Pierce, Florida (where I had already lived a number of years) after
living in Miami for almost ten years. I was not content to sit back
and watch an indeed rich local hertiage titter-totter with its own
self recognition. I became involved with the County Historical Museum
and a group of educators in the community for a multi-discplinary
activity involving a S.I.T.E.S. exhibition from the Smithsonian, a
performance of the Harambee Singers, and a literary symposium on the
Harlem Renaissance. I worked with the local community helping with
its arts festival for a second year, but was inspired to work on my
own agenda as well. I
had taken a long hiatus in my artmaking and had recently begun to
re-immerse myself in that creative process. One of the things I had
done was photograph interesting sights in the local cemeteries, something
I had been doing since the 1960's, but Ft. Pierce would prove to be
significantly different. Months
before the 1988 Black Arts Festival had taken place, I had initiated
a symposium at the Center for the Arts, Vero Beach, Fl, with funding
from Florida Humanities Council. In retrospect, I think it was a bold
idea to want Dr.
Robert F. Thompson for keynote speaker, and since I hadn't
really thought of an alternate, it was quite fortunate that he was
able to make the engagement. After the lecture on the way back to the airport I showed him the
photograph that now appears in the catalogue, "Face
of the Gods: Art and Altars in the African Americas".
He was totally ecstatic and suggested that I make it the beginning
point for a complete project. Naturally, I thought it was a very interesting idea, but I was not able to start on it until much later. I was restricted by the enormity of the financial costs of the project. The amount of time was relatively short but the transportation, film and paper processing really put a dent in my finances. Actually, it has prevented me, at this stage, to continue working. I have sought out funding from the Florida Humanities Council but, local humamities funding is available to organizations only. On the national level, without being an degreed scholar, and fitting into a clearly definable funding category, financing has not materialized.
|
|
||||||||
| HOME | ART PROJECTS | WRITING PROJECTS | RESUME BIO | |||
| © onajide shabaka 1997-2003 | copyright release conditions | privacy | |||