Griots of Cotton, Indigo, & Clay

 

The City of Charleston Office of Cultural Affairs presents Griots of Cotton, Indigo, and Clay, on view January 17-February 28, 2022 at City Gallery.

Griots of Cotton, Indigo, & Clay debuts the permanent collection of the Acres of Ancestry Initiative/Black Agrarian Fund, an evolution of the advocacy efforts of the Black Belt Justice Center. Curated by Torreah “Cookie” Washington, and featuring over 100 pieces of artwork commissioned from Black fiber artists in the South Carolina Lowcountry, the Black Belt South, and the African Diaspora at large, this vast array of textile art portrays the power of the Black imagination to extend beyond colonial frameworks, centering narratives of self-sustained land ownership and spirit-cultural reclamation.

Inspired by the movement for restoration of eco-cultural traditional practices, Griots of Cotton, Indigo, & Clay showcases the rich tradition of fiber art as material culture and tells the untold stories of struggle and resilience rooted in black ecocultural traditions and textile arts. The artworks of over four dozen seasoned artisans will be on view, including works by the artists of The Return of the Bees Collective. The collected artworks examine the ideals of racial pride, social power, identity, and the importance of land, heritage, and culture.

States exhibiting artist and curator Cookie Washington, “Black fiber artisans uphold the charge of griots, weaving together narratives of resistance into tactile expressions of land memory and visions for the future.” This traveling exhibition explores the innovations of eco-cultural techniques in appliqué, basket-weaving, collage, indigo, and painting, celebrating an ecosystem of over 50 master fiber artists, ceramicists, sweetgrass preservers, and blacksmiths.

This exhibition is generously supported by the Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation and received funding from the National Museum of Women in the Arts.

About the curator:

Cookie Washington

Torreah “Cookie” Washington is a textile designer who has been a working studio artist for more than 25 years. Washington has designed costumes for theater, film, and the stage as well as high fashion wedding gowns and soft fashion accessories for women. Her proudest accomplishment to date is having been selected as one of 44 Master Art Quilters to create a quilt to honor President Barack Obama. For 16 years, Washington has also been curator for the African American Fiber Arts Exhibit that is part of the North Charleston Cultural Arts Festival. Washington’s passion is fiber art muralism that celebrates African American culture and history and the Divine Feminine. “I am a mostly self-taught quilt artist. I have been a fiber artist of some sort my whole life. At four years old, my Granddaddy paid me fifty cents for the first “Barbie” dress I ever designed.” Washington has been featured in three documentary films about African American Art Quilters: The Wayshowers, which she shared executive producer credit on, with Susan Scott Hester, and the film Skin Quilt by Lauren Cross, as well as the 2020 film Gratitude a short film by Gavin Shelton. Washington says, “I find that textile design emits a spirit, a presence, an energy, a vitality unlike that of any other medium.  Quilting is in my blood. Enslaved Africans used quilting to tell their stories. I wish to keep this tradition alive, and through my work validate our culture by weaving stories of the African or African-American experience, into my quilts, just as my foremothers did almost four hundred years ago.  Even though I’m working in a medium centuries old, I believe art quilters are shifting the historical to accommodate our new application. Art quilting, an emerging art form, is a fairly small part of the art world.  I am thrilled to be part of it.”

 

About the Black Belt Justice Center, Acres of Ancestry, and Return of the Bees Collective:

Black Belt Justice Center is a legal and advocacy nonprofit organization dedicated to assisting African American farmers, landowners and communities in the Black Belt region in efforts to retain and increase landownership; to create sustainable, land-based cooperatives and entrepreneurial businesses; and to ensure intergenerational and community wealth.

Acres of Ancestry Initiative/Black Agrarian Fund is a multidisciplinary, cooperative ecosystem rooted in Black ecocultural traditions and textile arts to regenerate custodial landownership, ecological stewardship, and food and fiber economies in the South.

Supported by the Acres of Ancestry Initiative/Black Agrarian Fund, the Return of the Bees Collective is a supportive and active community, whose mission is to raise visibility of and educate the public about the vast spectrum of African American textile art and artists. Return of the Bees Hive Members work out of their own homes or small studios. They strive to gain strength, share knowledge, and support each other’s projects. They take part at least twice a year in a traditional quilting bee gathering, usually at their group shows.

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