Showing posts with label Trayvon Martin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trayvon Martin. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

POST: Andre LeRoy Davis Presents Trayvon Martin Inspired Art Exhibition


Text | Yohance Kyles for AllHipHop.com

Published | February 26, 2014

February 26th, marks two years since the tragic killing of Trayvon Martin. As a tribute to Martin’s life, artist and author Andre LeRoy Davis (The Source magazine’s “The Last Word”) has curated a new multi-medium art exhibition titled 17: The Revolution Will Be Visualized.

Davis tapped 17 African-American artists to present works that not only honor Martin, but also serve as protest pieces against the senseless killing of all young Black males and laws such as “Stop and Frisk” and “Stand Your Ground.”

The exhibit is showing at the Stratosphere Studios in Brooklyn. An opening ceremony is scheduled for today from 6-10 pm and March 1st from 3-6 pm. Davis and the other artists will be on hand to discuss their artwork.

17 will also feature similar events in New Rochelle (March 15th) and The Art Gallery in Harlem (May 10th). The closing ceremony for the event will take place May 11th from 2-8pm at The Art Gallery.

The artists commissioned to participate in 17:The Revolution Will Be Visualized are Cey Adams, Baba Dawud Anyabwile, Reuben Cheatem, Jennifer Crute, Jerry Lee Brice, Stephan LeRoy Davis, Ida “Hotpeenzubutta” Harris, Fedrecia Hartley, Chris Herod, Oronde Kairi Johnson, Gerald Jones, Isis Kenney, Sheeba Maya, Kevin McDowellCharly Palmer, TTK, and Grey Williamson.




Monday, July 15, 2013

CAPTURED: James Brewton

Photograph by Dirk Shadd/AP
Artist's Reaction to the George Zimmerman trial verdict

From the Washington Post, July 14, 2013:  

James Brewton, 39, from Brandon, Fla., hoists a portrait of Trayvon Martin along with a group of about 175 people as they gather at Curtis Hixon Waterfront Park after marching to the federal courthouse in Tampa. “I painted it last week,” Brewton said. “I just had a feeling it wasn't going to go right.” Brewton, an artist and toy designer, calls his acrylic on canvas painting “Innocent Eyes, Hard Streets.”





Tuesday, April 3, 2012

POST: Trayvon Martin depicted in Baltimore street art series

Baltimore street artist Justin Nether composed this mural, depicting Trayvon Martin, at East Baltimore and Caroline streets. (Handout photo, Handout photo)
Teenager's controversial death inspires illustrations by artist 'Justin Nether'
By Mary Carole McCauley, The Baltimore Sun
March 30, 2012

Oversized illustrations of Florida teenager Trayvon Martin have begun to spring up on abandoned buildings throughout Baltimore, the work of a street artist protesting the death of the 17-year-old at the hands of a neighborhood watch volunteer.
An image of the young man's hooded face went up overnight on Wednesday at the intersection of Caroline and Baltimore streets. Only the youth's chin is visible, but a bag of Skittles — the type of candy Trayvon was carrying when he was shot — is superimposed in the lower right corner of the poster.
A similar wheat paste painting appeared Friday morning at Franklin and Park Avenues, and the photographer and painter artist, who uses the pseudonym of Justin Nether, is planning to put up eight to ten more in the coming weeks, and all on vacant properties.
"This is an issue that still needs to be addressed," the 22-year-old Seton Hill resident said in a phone interview. Like most street artists, he wouldn't allow his legal name to be used.
"Racism still exists in America and in Baltimore even though we pretend that it doesn't. If people see these images and are affected by them, then maybe things will begin to change."
Nether said he didn't ask permission from the building owners before pasting up the posters, and acknowledged that what he's doing is "on the gray side" of the law.
He said that's why he uses wheat paste — a mix of flour, water and wood glue that is less permanent than the paints used for graffiti. He paints his images on top of a heavy graphic paper, which can easily be scrubbed off.
Nether has been pasting up his posters for two years, and many have political or social themes. Another series showed local adults and children removing gas masks to sniff a flower. But, this is the first group of works that he's done in response to a hot-button issue in the news, and he senses that he's struck a chord.
"I'm getting a great reaction to this series," he said. "Within minutes of posting the images online, they had hundreds of hits."
Nether began his career as a photographer. He studied for two years at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts, and takes courses locally at Towson University and the Maryland Institute, College of Art.
But after encountering Gaia and other Baltimore street artists, Nether realized he didn't want to be limited to documenting just those objects that were actually present. To create the image of Trayvon, he started with a photograph of a hoodie. Then, he sketched the boy's chin beneath the garment, and covered the finished portrait with a layer of wheat paste.
By the time he's finished, the original photograph has disappeared.
Nether completed the image in about six hours. As he was worked, he thought about how a hood can change a simple sweat shirt into something that can appear more menacing.




Friday, March 23, 2012

CAPTURED: Million Hoodie March / March 21, 2012

© 2012 Lenyon Whitaker. All rights reserved. Used with permission. 
New Yorkers sign up for Florida shooting victim Trayvon Martin

PHOTOS BY LENYON WHITAKER

From the New York Times:
More than a thousand people rallied in Union Square on Wednesday evening with the parents of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed teenager who was shot dead in Florida in late February. The protest, dubbed “A Million Hoodies March for Trayvon Martin” on Facebook and elsewhere, attracted an angry and racially diverse crowd of New Yorkers. 

© 2012 Lenyon Whitaker. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
© 2012 Lenyon Whitaker. All rights reserved. Used with permission. 
© 2012 Lenyon Whitaker. All rights reserved. Used with permission. 


View more Million Hoodie March images by Lenyon Whitaker here.


Sign Criminal Justice Petition to prosecute killer of Trayvon Martin