PHOTOSTREAM: Theaster Gates & the Black Monks of Mississippi at the Akron Art Museum by Anastasia Pantsios

Wed 9/14

Chicago artist/”urban intervionist” Theaster Gates came to Akron to spend time with community arts & culture leaders there and share his ideas about community building, something he’s done with creativity and panache on the struggling south side of his hometown.

That included a free public performance at the Akron Art Museum with his musical ensemble the Black Monks of Mississippi. The trio entered through the audience to launch its hour-long performance, which opened with Gates taping to the floor large sheets of paper with handwritten words and short phrases, the sort of thing produced by brainstorming group workshops.

The performance itself featured some traditional soul and gospel harmonizing, mingling with spoken word and the use of sounds such as humming, moaning, chanting and droning. Although it was largely a vocal performance, it also featured some cello playing from member Khari Lemuel.

Gates also moved around the performance area, interacting in different ways with the other two members, busting out some dance steps and displaying some of the large sheets of paper. The poignancy and beauty of the music offered a contrast to Gates’ lyrics needling of the groupthink processes which often pass for civic and community engagement. At one point, he headed out into the crowd and began to distribute bottles of water to the audience, another standard trope of such civic meetings.

As Gates mentioned during the Q&A following the performance, he’s had some learning to do as far as making his projects a reality. His first major community initiative, the Dorchester Projects, involved buying some homes in the blighted Greater Grand Crossing neighborhood and turning them into artist studios and other informal cultural hubs. He’s gone on to bigger things.

A few years ago, he purchased an old neoclassical-style bank building in the Woodlawn neighborhood from the city for $1 and turned it into the Stony Island Arts Bank, with exhibition space and libraries of African-American literature, art & architecture slides, and vinyl owned by the late house DJ Frankie Knuckles. It opened last fall, hosting the opening event of the first-ever Chicago Architecture Biennial in what was surely the first visit to the south side by many in attendance. And he’s developing an arts incubator in partnership with the University of Chicago where he’s a professor.

And last week, his Rebuild Foundation received the dismantled gazebo where Tamir Rice was shot at Cleveland’s Cudell Community Center in November 2014. It’s currently in storage for repairs, and he plans to put it on display at the Arts Bank or another location after discussions with the community about how to display it.

View the PHOTOSTREAM here.

theastersmall

Akron, OH 44308

Post categories:

One Response to “PHOTOSTREAM: Theaster Gates & the Black Monks of Mississippi at the Akron Art Museum by Anastasia Pantsios”

  1. I am interested in featuring Anastasia Pantsios’s posting on the Theaster Gates performance on the sociallyengagedcraftcollective.org blog. I may be contacted via the email I’ve provided. Anastasia Pantsios and CoolCleveland will be credited as well as a link to this site.

Leave a Reply

[fbcomments]