Category Archives: Live Unchained

New Technology, New Artistic Opportunities: Bring Live Unchained to SXSW!

We’re teaming up with two community minded tech experts, Kristen Nicole and Wayne Sutton, to discuss the importance of black women’s representation in the on- and offline art world and propose new technology for connecting the international black arts community. We want to bring our panel “Art, Technology and Representation: Empowering Women of the African Diaspora through Big Data and Global Networks” to South X Southwest (SXSW). This web conference brings together great technological and entrepreneurial minds to discuss and collaborate on the next important digital trends. We aim to make art, women and people of the African diaspora a part of that discussion and included in the next technological innovation as well as learn as much as we can to advance our project.

You’re with us, right? Vote here: http://bit.ly/vote4lu

Check out our proposal video to learn more.

Our vision is to bring the art, ideas and talent of Live Unchained to people of African descent throughout the world. Although the Internet helps us build the Live Unchained brand and international network, the digital divide is still a very real problem, leaving blacks in the U.S. and abroad without adequate Internet access. Fortunately (although not sufficiently), technological advancements, especially Big Data and App development, are creating more opportunities to reach out to people who have had limited access, which is what we want to explore.

We need your support to make it to SXSW. We appreciate your vote: http://bit.ly/vote4lu

Project Media Muse Complete: Get your free “unchained” PDF!

Much thanks to everyone who participated in our latest creative collab project, “Media Muse.” We asked you all to show up online via Twitter, Facebook and, here, on our blog, to tell us how you would finish this sentence: “You’re unchained when…” We then invited some of our favorite illustrators, cartoonists and designers to create an image based on the lines that spoke to them. Your liberated imaginations inspired some incredible pieces by brilliant artists.

Check out the works below and download your free “unchained” PDF. It’s our way of saying thank you for being an inspiration. Yes, that’s what you are to us :-) .


Contributing Artists:
 

Afua Richardson
Aida Sofia Barba
Sean Mack
Kendall Patterson
M. Rasheed
Tim Rodgers
Lance Tooks
Jessika Von Innerebner

The “Work” in Artwork: Kesha Bruce on Entrepreneurial Artistry

Building an artistic career is not just about conquering your inner-critic, releasing your inhibitions and allowing the expression to come forth; we also need to hone our craft and develop our brand. So, for some of us, accepting this process means relaxing away from the idea that business-like thought, action or strategy makes our art less valid, passionate and cool. Kesha Bruce, art hero, consultant, radio host and curator, encourages artists to see entrepreneurship as empowerment–a way to own and affirm your creative message.

Kesha Bruce

Kesha is an internationally noted painter and collage artist, living and working in the United States and France. Of her creative journey she explains: “I was just another young, struggling artist. I was born and raised in Iowa, where I studied art and graduated with a BFA in painting from the University of Iowa. A week after graduation, I sold everything I owned and bought a one-way plane ticket to New York City. I landed in Brooklyn with nothing more than a backpack full of badly wrinkled clothes, 2 pairs of shoes, and $3000 in cash in my pocket. Not only did I manage to survive, but I completed my MFA in painting at Hunter College and built a life for myself as a working artist.”

Kesha’s own experiences with both hardship and success have truly influenced the passion she brings to the topic of creative entrepreneurship. Here she shares the details of the forthcoming 6×6 exhibit in New York (which encourages artists to get their hustle up and celebrates them for doing so), the importance of women’s art communities and creating against the odds.

Can you tell us what 6×6 is all about and your inspiration for creating it?

6×6 came about when my Baang and Burne co-director, Charlie Grosso, and I started asking ourselves the question: What if there were no more art galleries? The answer we came up with was that if there were no more art galleries, artists would have to learn to take complete control over their careers and the marketing and sales of their work. We both see that as a great freeing opportunity.

The whole point of 6×6 is to lead by example. The entire event is meant to be a blue-print for how artists can get together and help each other promote their work. Aside from the six exhibitions, we’ve teamed up with the New York Foundation for the Arts to present two workshops for artists. One will focus on how to fine tune your website so that it not only showcases your work, but will help you build your collector base.

We really appreciate how you encourage artists to expand their creative community. In addition to seeking out artists with common interests, what do you think of female artists reaching out to women’s centered art organizations or other female creatives, in general?

I think it’s a great idea for women artists and creative to reach out and connect with each other. It’s not a cliché to say that there is strength in numbers. I say this all the time—other artists aren’t your competition, they are your greatest allies. Women artists should take this idea to heart.

I especially think younger artists can learn a lot from other women in their field that have more years of experience and wisdom to offer. That’s one of the reasons I refocused my studio blog around helping other artists. Most of the young artists who e-mail me for advice are women. I don’t think that’s a coincidence. I think they are looking for someone who they can connect and identify with, and who has faced similar challenges to the ones they are currently facing. I’m always eager to help because I think we have a responsibility to each other.

Are there things you typically turn to for creative inspiration? Do you think the idea of needing inspiration to move forward is a hyped up excuse for creative procrastination?

Whenever I get “art career burn-out” I take lots of steps to recover and replenish. I consider it a part of my studio practice. I take weekends trips. I visit galleries. I spend a day on my sofa watching zombie movies…whatever it takes. But then I get myself back in my studio and start working. Beyond that it can become procrastination.

I believe that almost all procrastination is based in fear. Fear that you’re not good enough, fear of rejection, or even the fear that you won’t live up to your past work. The only way to conquer that fear is to face it head on and get to work! There really is no other way.

What does living unchained mean to you?

Living unchained means freedom. It means trusting your ideas and your vision enough that you allow yourself the freedom to truly explore them. Creativity isn’t about “making” things happen; it’s about allowing things to happen.

To read Kesha’s weekly articles on art, art marketing, and creativity and to download a free copy of her guide “The 5 Step Art Career Make-Over” visit www.KeshaBrucestudio.com.

Through my body, I live unchained

Post by LU Team Member Lulu Kitololo

As Niambi mentioned last week, I too am very honored and excited to be a part of this community and share my thoughts, inspiration and passion when it comes to art and living unchained.

Fittingly, there’s a question that I’ve been asking myself and exploring
for years, albeit not always in these exact words and sometimes, not even
consciously: How can/does art enable us to live unchained?

Last week I came across a CNN interview with one of my favorite artists, Wangechi Mutu. In a lot of her work, she takes the female body and transforms it into something new that is often at once dazzling and provocative. In the interview, she talks about how she is inviting Kenyans and Africans (essentially, women of African descent) to celebrate and appreciate our bodies, rather than despise them as we have been taught or even forced to do.

"Untitled" by Wangechi Mutu

It made me think of how else art representing bodies is used to challenge
assumed knowledge or even address stigma – in short, to empower. One of
the first examples that came to mind is the Trust for Indigenous Culture
and Health
and their body mapping work – an art project whose explicit intent is healing. Pioneered by an HIV positive women’s group in Uganda, body mapping involves painting large scale silhouettes representing your body, its experiences and how you nurture it. Through creating and sharing these pieces of art, the women chart their powerful emotions on the path to healing.

Indeed, sometimes the most powerful tool we have is the one we often take for granted, mistreat or view as an enemy – our precious body. With it,
we can be incredibly creative, even if we don’t consider ourselves to be artists or creatively-inclined. Engaging with it, listening to it, appreciating it, celebrating it and taking pride in it – regardless of the challenges it may present –  is one way we exercise living unchained.

Our bodies are available to us right here now and so experiencing that
unchained living is simple. Take one of the things that makes me most
happy in this world – dancing. In surrendering my body to the music, it is
freed to move and express itself in a way that is independent from my
thoughts.

Though the moments may be fleeting, it is in these glimpses
where all the things I have been told (or told myself) about my body are
exposed for the irrelevant or even false statements that they are. Through
my movement, I create a new vision for myself. These are powerful times.

How does your body help you to live unchained?

Sapphire’s New Book: Still Helping us See, Helping us Heal

Guest Post by LU Team Member Niambi Wilder

Greetings Everyone!

I am so honored to be a part of this movement and to be able to offer my unique perspective on living unchained. This is my first blog post ever (gasp) so I’m a little nervous, but also super excited.

I’ve decided to make my blog entries a series of interviews with some of the dopest, flyest, freshest, down-to-earthest :) sista-warrior-healer-artists I know. I must confess – the first one will be a little bit of a cheat because I don’t actually know this person and the interview isn’t actually one that I conducted. BUT, I hope you’ll grant me a pass, just this once, as the interviewer is a sista named Akoto Ofori-Atta of TheRoot.com and the interviewee is the unapologetically bold Sapphire, author of the critically acclaimed novel Push and recently completed her second novel, The Kid, which tells the story of Precious’ son, Abdul, after his mother’s death.

Sapphire, Photo via Clark Atlanta University

You may recall the film adaptation, Precious, being backed by Ms. Oprah Winfrey herself and being blessed with a talented director, crew and cast, including stand-out Mo’Nique, who won an Academy Award for her portrayal of the protagonist’s damaged and abusive mother, Mary. (Mo’Nique is also a real-life survivor of sexual abuse.)

I have chosen to make this interview the first in the series because Sapphire, through prose (her art/weapon of choice), exhibits what it is to live unchained. She is willing to look critically and delve deeply into issues like HIV/AIDS, incest and rape — issues that others wouldn’t dare touch. She writes with purpose about very raw and painful human experiences that are, unfortunately, a reality for entirely too many of us in the Diaspora – girls and boys, women and men.  This bold and fearless, yet thoughtful and deliberate, approach to expression is exactly what we need in order to heal ourselves and finally be free.

It is my hope that, by reading this interview and the others that are to follow, you will be inspired to speak unreserved, to move uninhibited, to create unrestrained and to live unchained!

Excerpt–Read the full article at The Root.

The Root: Why did you kill Precious? 

Sapphire: I’m a social realist in terms of writing. African-American women who were diagnosed with AIDS at the time that Push was written were 10 times more likely than upper-class, gay white men to die in the first couple months of diagnosis. So Precious couldn’t survive. One of the reasons I wrote Push was to show how precious — ha, ha — these kids might be if given the opportunity to live.

The Root: In Push, sympathy was really a driving element in how readers related to Precious. In The Kid, Abdul is abused, but he also does some abusing and dreams about molesting young boys, making it hard at times to show him compassion. What role does sympathy play in this book?

Sapphire: Can’t you still love and admire him even though he is a deeply flawed human being? That’s the question I put forth to the reader. We see all the good things about Abdul’s ambition and his integrity. But given what has happened to him, can’t we still love this child? Because how can we find our ways back to life without love?

 


Ain HD: Write to the Core

Born in Cashville, raised in Motown, resting in Black Hollywood, Ain HD (Ain Heath Drew) considers herself a writer with a passion for “poetry, African-American literature, children’s stories, music, revolution, experimental fiction, thrift store hopping, and all things artsy”–not to mention tattoo collecting.

Ain has been featured in PoetTree Magazine and the Kankazine. Her work has also been on literary sites such as Dotlit and Identity Theory. Ain’s essay, “Being a Sista at PETA,” can be found in the powerful anthology Sistah Vegan: Black Female Vegans Speak on Food, Identity, Health, and Society. In addition to writing, Ain is active in her community, working with organizations like United Sisters Mentoring Program and FTP (Feed the People, Free the Prisoners, Fruition Through Persistence).

Her self-published poetry collection, [If] Life’s Rotten: Write to the Core, explores love, social problems and self-discovery. Here we discuss Ain’s book, the core personal experiences that shaped her poetry and artistic philosophy, and laugh about romantic fantasies.

We always begin by asking people background questions. For you, I’d like to start with the first writing prompt from your book, [If] Life’s Rotten, Write to the Core. “Who are you? If you were an object or an idea, how would people describe you? How would you describe yourself?”

I’m never sure how to describe myself, but I know how I’d like other people to describe me. Of all the adjectives that get thrown around, I probably hear “weird” the most. I’m cool with that.

Where did the title come from? Why the “[If]“?

Writing has always been a release for me. I’ve never necessarily been one to
write poetry that captured the pretty or sweet. I go out and experience the things that I enjoy, I write about the things that I don’t. I’m not claiming that my poetry is dark, but I address a lot of rotten things that the world hands to us, including poverty, discrimination and inequality.

The brackets are present because I realize not everyone will agree with my statement and they tone down the extremeness of it.

In addition to poems,Write to the Core, has writing prompts for self-reflection that makes it feel like a life-changing personal reflection class. Why did you choose that approach?

I wanted to include the reader by adding the prompts so they could interact with the poetry. Critical thinking is a must in this age of mass media. I don’t want people walking away from my work trying to dissect my words; I want them to connect with them.

Many prompts concerned personal development, but some also addressed politics. Like prompt #9: “Classism is a big problem in American society. How do you feel about the separation of classes? Do we have a system set up that works to keep the privileged rich as the underprivileged get poorer?” How would you answer them for yourself?

I don’t believe in politics, I believe in people. Most political positions are about as useless as office managers. If you remove these people from power, I would hope that people would be able to govern themselves. Essentially, I ask these questions to challenge people to think about whether the system is working for or against us. What people do with the thoughts is up to them, but I hope for all of us to become more proactive.

Still, I don’t believe, I know the system is designed that way. In knowing that, I encourage people to become more self-reliant, support independent business, embrace the idea of cooperative economics and stop falling into the traps of consumerism. I don’t think I have an artistic responsibility to highlight or speak on these things–it’s my responsibility as a citizen. More of us should be having these conversations.

You mentioned finding “a love poem that spoke to my personal experiences, I folded it up and kept it in my underwear drawer.” What was that poem?

That poem was Sonia Sanchez’s ‘Poem No. 3.’ I dig the simplicity of it.

She wrote:

i gather up
each sound
you left behind
and stretch them
on our bed.
each nite
i breathe you
and become high.

This poem was a keepsake during a time that I was nursing a wound. She speaks of a love lost but she’s not mourning. She’s enjoying the comfort of memories.


Memories
by Ain HD

If I could live each day
From scratch
Not remembering what happened
Each yesterday
I would be content
Because all these little
Scattered pictures
Of your beautiful
Face
Would fade away
And if I saw you
In the street and you said hello
I would be clueless
As to who you were
Instead of wishing
You had said
Something more

If you could make love to any artist from history who would it be? :-)

I’ve played these sessions over and again in my head so it’s hard to choose just one. I have a slutty imagination.

I have a Jean-Michel Basquiat fantasy. He seemed to have a muted sexual energy that probably translates into a great deal of passion. I also have a Tupac fantasy. He was both rugged and sensitive. That contrast is attractive. Then there’s Bob Marley and the beautiful Marvin Gaye.

Heaven
by Ain HD

I sang a duet with Nina Simone
Played craps with Tupac & Biggie
Did a routine with Aaliyah
Tapped with Gregory Hines
And salsa danced with Celia Cruz

Me and Left-Eye had a freestyle battle
Big L said it was a tie and Freaky Tah said “right right”
Because Big Pun said “both of these mamis’ tight”
And Easy E sat back smooth and said “yeah, they aiight”
In that smooth Cali drawl
And then we listened to a set of Barry White

Luther V. was live at dinnertime
When I ate with the civil rights greats
Who say that we don’t try hard enough
To have all this heaven
Down there

In your poems, and even some of the writing prompts in the collection, I saw a sense of longing and, I guess that’s where I’m at in my life–longing for my professional and spiritual lives to come together the way I’ve wanted. How would you describe the place you were when you were writing and compiling this collection?

I was in a few places (mentally, spiritually and physically) while compiling this collection. These poems were written over the course of several years. During some of that time I was either comfortable, transitioning or lost. At this time, I’m comfortable again and still transitioning. I’m still growing, which is something I hope I can say when I’m 99.

Finally, what does Living Unchained mean to you?

Living Unchained means living without constraints and making your own rules. It means defining success for yourself and refusing to bend to the expectations of others. It means not conforming to commercial ideals and honoring traditions in a way that suits the lifestyle you desire.

Follow Ain HD on Twitter: @AinHD

 

The Illustrated Guide to Epic Fulfillment


Great people don’t make amazing projects, amazing projects make great people. I’ve known that somewhat for a while, but now it’s clicked. Here’s how I put two and two together…

I’ve been doing more self-reflection, readings on personal growth and journaling. Osho’s article on restlessness really resonated with me, especially his description of life’s drama. It’s easy to identify with the characters on stage when, really, we’re just the audience. Some scenes in my life called for different actors that play judgmental gossip, pretentious blowhard and undercover hater–performances I loved to boo like I was at the Apollo. I got caught up, giving too much importance to their roles before realizing they were just foils that gave the overall story more layers and depth. What I’m seeing now has gotten richer and more exciting with the new characters and dialogue that Live Unchained is introducing. The show has me laughing, contemplating and dancing in my seat =). I’m a happy audience member, glad I showed up.

And, I’ve been taking notes on how everything unfolds in my journal. I’ve never enjoyed journalling as much as I do now. I think it’s because earlier I was too busy trying to be the lead director–you know, trying to cast a male lead that would rescue the main actress financially, romantically and emotionally, for example–instead of being an attentive audience member.

My life, the stage, the actors, the script; they give me everything I need to grow. When Live Unchained is a global household name, wreaking massive creativity worldwide, and I’m writing a post with the crew from an event in Dakar, I’ll re-read my journal and connect the dots.  My journals aren’t just books of secrets anymore, they’re my compass. I’ll see that through my journaling (complete with drawings and smiley and sad faces), I had written Kathryn’s Illustrated Guide to Epic Fulfillment.

Here are a few lines from my latest entry: “Miriam and I aren’t creating Live Unchained, it’s creating us, bringing us closer and making us wiser. I’m not making art, it’s making me.”

Me and my good friend Khaleelah raising votes for a competition with our crafty Live Unchained sign


“Art is the Battery”: Delphine Diallo Discusses Her Photography and the Magic of Spirit

Magic Photo Studio, Delphine Diallo

“We’ve been influenced by the pessimistic vision of photojournalism, and the obsessive, perfect fashion aesthetic…These images are still in my mind, printed in my subconscious. It is time to transcend them.” –Delphine Diallo

Delphine Diallo transcends the status quo in photography by simply following her spirit.  Trusting it led her to Senegal–her father’s homeland, Indi–the little girl that became her muse, and dipping herself in blue after being inspired by the film Avatar.

Delphine was born in Paris and currently lives in New York where she has continued to work as a photographer, graphic designer, illustrator and filmmaker among other creative ventures. After graduating with distinction from the Académie Charpentier School of Visual Art in 1999, she worked as a graphic designer and animator for several musicians, including Coldplay, Smashing Pumpkins, and Manu Chao.

In speaking with Delphine about her background, travels and views on art and style, we learned that her major influences are love and spirit.

Indi, Delphine's Muse and Mona Lisa, Delphine Diallo

Avatar, Delphine Diallo

How does your background influence your work?
Being mixed and having an African dad and a French mom makes me realize that I might have something different to express. Also, working in the music industry with great artists inspires me to create artwork that is personal and very emotional. It helps me to take a risk and be totally free–to open my mind about a different vision of the world.

Some say art is like a window into themselves and the world. Do you agree?
Yes it is… art is a reflection of my thoughts, my beliefs, my fear, my love about the world. I have direct connection with the world… it is like a fluid, where media influences become secondary and where your mind is feeling every single moment of your life and translates to your own vision through photography. This vision becomes the part of your real world and you are able to build a strong link with the world around you.

Photography allows me to develop images that transcend stereotypes in a world that consistently perpetuates a singular attitude as to what is deemed beautiful.

"Monica" and "Azza" from the Queen of New York series by Delphine Diallo

What does art allow you to discover about yourself and others?
Art is the key to live in a better world if you know how to use it.  Art has opened my mind to understand how as an individual you can contribute to improve others life too.  I became more tolerant, less selfish, giving myself the freedom to understand the other and discover that without your friends and family, you won’t be inspired.

Can you tell us about how Africa came to be a recurring theme in your work?
Africa is the first place where I was inspired. In this land, no one is running and people take time to share and stay in family. I’m inspired because of the nature, light, people, colors, wildlife…everything about Africa is inspiring. It has a pureness of the beauty of the moment.  A natural moment is unique, like a magic chemical, instant. My pictures are raw and full of natural emotion.

"Dream Life" from the Renaissance Series by Delphine Diallo

You created a body of work called “Renaissance,” which captures images from your trip to Senegal? Can you share with us what you learned from your experience in Senegal and what you wanted to capture in pieces inspired by that trip?
I FLEW to Saint-Louis, Senegal, land of her ancestors, in search of Something permanent. “Renaissance” is the body of work that resulted from this trip. It is a series of stories in which the protagonists are heroes of ancient tales, where beauty and violence coexist on parallel planes, the one reflected and made possible only by the other. The men and women featured in “Renaissance” are spiritually strong, beautiful, full of life, and proud despite life’s cruelty. In “The Beautiful Ones,” Anta, an eleven-year-old girl appears frequently in the photographs, symbolizing youthful strength, potential and innocence not yet lost. Khady Kebe & Loli, two seventeen year olds represent young ladies full of life, joy, and (perhaps naïve) hope for a better future. Kine Diop is a twenty eight-year-old who represents the proud African queen, symbolic of maturity and serenity in the face of hardship. My work is often autobiographical and these women are me at various stages of my own life. The images encountered are filled with weakness and suffering. “The Goats” depicts tranquility and slaughter, innocence as well as a supreme vulnerability culminating in death. “Le Boucher” is the story of a slayer, one who carves food from the dead to sustain life. He represents the cycle of life – destruction, distress, and the raw violence of reality in balance with life-sustaining nourishment and renewal. metaphorically, “Le Boucher” also represents a broken heart cut in pieces. The flesh is dead and from this carcass the spirit is reborn.

"Universal Magazine" and "Superstar" by Delphine Diallo

"Oulofs" from the Magic Photo Studio Series by Delphine Diallo

Could you talk about the use of collage and layering in your art? What draws you to merge photography and other mediums as seen in your collection “Magic Photo Studio”?
Photography is a process that can be reproduced and copied. I was trying to find a way to do something unique, so… I was definitely interested in drawing on top of it. The purpose of “magic photo studio” was to create a strong link with my family that i just discovered.  It was also a powerful message about giving love through photography to the one who makes your life beautiful.

You once said your art reflects “spirituality and lots of love.” Can you say more about that? Would you consider yourself spiritually grounded and do you think that helps your art?
Being spiritual is sometimes something that you have in yourself since you are born.  Let’s just say that for me, I was already with strong spirit but I didn’t know what it was. It’s difficult to explain, but it’s like having a lot of energy and feeling and not knowing how to use and control it for a long time. The maturity and experience help you to channel this power and transform it through art. Love, love is the key.  It is hard to love yourself and be confident but that’s the first part, to be able to embrace your spirit.

Art is the battery, a meditative process to connect with yourself… you will believe I am crazy… but I think we should be able to be educated this way. Our wisdom and connection to the planet have been lost growing up in the 21st century.

What does living unchained mean to you?
I am, and my life is a journey to discover everyday what I’m going to become–with no fear.

Follow more of Delphine’s art, thoughts and musings on her blog, http://delphinediallo.wordpress.com/, and visit her professional site at http://www.delphinediawdiallo.com/.

“Afri-Love is a feeling”: Lulu Kitololo Discusses Her Vision, Art and Life Unchained

Imagine all who are inspirited by Africa – all whose lives and hearts have been touched by the spirit of the continent – sharing their passion through collaboration, in the name of mutual empowerment. –Lulu Kitololo

Illustration by Lulu Kitololo

Lulu Kitololo is a self-defined “ideamonger,” using painting, graphic design, illustration, writing and workshops, to tell stories that honor the beauty in women, Africa, life and nature. Lulu is creator of the Afri-love blog, which explores the connections between creativity, self-love and growth for Africans and those inspired by the continent. The blog features commentary, interviews, resources and reviews on art and culture.

Born and raised in Nairobi, Kenya, Lulu moved to New York to earn a BFA in Communications Design from Pratt Institute. After working there as an advertising Art Director, she moved to the UK to pursue a Master’s in African Studies at the University of London.

Can you tell us about Afri-love?

Afri-love is a feeling. I remember being this really opinionated, patriotic kid, before I even really knew anything … about anything! When I left Kenya to pursue higher education in the US, I gained an even greater interest in where I came from. I was constantly meeting Africans, from all over the continent, and I observed that, diverse as our homelands were, there was so much we had in common. Especially, a love for the lands that were so much a part of us, no matter where we happened to be.

Design by Lulu Kitololo


Last year, I finally gave a name to that strong feeling and created an online space to express it, to share it with others and to collect all the expressions of it that I could find. I like to think of the website as a community for creativity and passion for Africans and all those who identify with or have an affinity for the continent.

Essentially, it’s a blog where you can find African and African-inspired art, design, literature and more. One of my favorite aspects is the interviews. I’ve had the opportunity to profile some amazing people who are living their passions and who are inspired by and devoted to Africa.

The vision of love you describe on Afri-Love is beautiful.  You say:

Imagine Africans who love who they are, as they are, and so love each other and the environment that nurtures them. Confident and assertive, they are engaged in charting their growth and celebrating success as defined on their own terms.

Imagine all who are inspirited by Africa – all whose lives and hearts have been touched by the spirit of the continent – sharing their passion through collaboration, in the name of mutual empowerment.

What compelled you to write this as you did?

Continue reading

Dreaming Through Art: Our Conversation with Daisy Giles


I aim to explore the beautifully natural and the stunningly fantastical…to express things that are inexpressible in words, which only live on the tips of tongues, in the subconscious, and in dreams of suppressed purposes and identities. –Daisy Giles

Live Unchained had the pleasure to speak with painter Daisy Giles, who studies and creates art in Minnesota. An admitted Harry Potter fan, she recognizes the magical in everyday life and translates that into vibrant, fantastical and beautiful paintings. We discussed her art, creative process, and inspirations.

Photo of Daisy Giles by Gyasi Jones

Can you tell us a little about your artistic background?
How did you become interested in art and why?

I have been drawing for as long as I can remember. My mother’s and my paintings cover the walls in our home (and my father’s office). My mom always loved to paint, as did both of her brothers and her own mother, so I suppose you could say its in my blood. Art was always a hobby for me however, and it wasn’t until taking some elective art courses at the University of Minnesota that I was opened up to the idea that I could pursue art as a career. I am incredibly thankful to my parents for always being supportive in this interest – my father bringing home stacks of recycled paper from his job for me to draw, my parents’ paying for private and community art classes when I was younger, building special storage in their basement for my artwork, and most recently – providing me with financial support that enabled me to quit my job so as to spend more time on the my art as I complete my BFA program. I am incredibly and eternally grateful to them for supporting my passion.

Mette by Daisy Giles. Oil on Panel.

Of your art, you’ve said:
In my work, I aim to explore the beautifully natural and the stunningly fantastical…My work is meant to express things that are inexpressible in words, which only live on the tips of tongues, in the subconscious, and in dreams of suppressed purposes and identities.

Can you say a little about what you mean by this? How did you come to be committed to this purpose?
Guilty pleasure and embarrassing admission: I am a Harry Potter fanatic. I love the Twilight series, I love fairy tales and folktales, I love campfires and spooky stories, and I love the idea that there is hidden magic all around me. I also am very interested in showcasing the beauty in things and people as they are: round bellies, soft bodies, wild hair, and humped backs. I feel like I am constantly painting portraits of myself, be it how I feel or how I want to feel.

The relationship between these two interests is what I am most concerned with exploring. I like the tension it creates when these two ideas collide. I think that there is something magical in every one of my paintings, something hidden and secret, something private, but something powerful nonetheless. I like playing with the simple situation of a beautiful and natural woman, pot bellied and relaxed, with the implausible situation of her hair growing three feet past her head and branching out to become a resting place for nearby birds. I like creating images of things that aren’t actual possible but that I wish were possible and that somehow feel like they could be. I think that these feelings are ones that many women can relate too, but that they perhaps can’t quite put their finger on and can’t quite define. When I am creating images, its always to express a feeling or an idea that I feel cannot ever be fully expressed in words.

Pomi's Roses by Daisy Giles. Oil on Canvas.

We’re sure it differs from piece to piece, but in general, can you share what the creative process and inspiration has been like for your portraits and your new series, Roses? How would you describe the aesthetic of these pieces?
The works in Roses, like all of my final works, begin with sketches, sketches, sketches. I let myself daydream and sometimes I let myself sleep. I like to create environments unto themselves, where my subjects are able to ponder whatever they so desire in solitude. Roses was no different from my Trees & Birds collection, in that I wanted to create these fictional locations, however in Roses, I really wanted the focus to be much more on the environment and on that seclusion than on the subject. So, rather than use the sparse open spaces that I created in my previous series, I came up with this concept of flowers crowding and encasing someone. I always begin my sketches with an overwhelming feeling (or some times multiple feelings) that I want to come across and then I go from there.

Who are some of your artistic inspirations?
Kara Walker is a huge inspiration. Her work literally gives me chills. I think I am so enamored with her work because she is able to walk that line of fantasy and the barely plausible so well. Her large-scale installations allow her to place the person viewing her work into her created environment and further heighten the tension created by the dark and violent images she creates. I admire her ability to create extremely beautiful and delicate images that are at the same time so heavy, so disgusting, and so off-putting. Mark Ryden greatly inspires me for similar reasons, although these tensions are expressed very differently in his work. I sometimes spend hours browsing his website and I absolutely never become bored with his highly detailed and romantic surrealism.

Ms. Paris by Daisy Giles. Oil on Panel.

Anything else you’d like to share?
I am constantly working on new and different projects. I like to keep it moving so that I am never bored with what I am working on and so that I always have five different things I can work on at once. However, I am currently most excited about my first portrait project. I have always drawn and painted commissioned portraits for those that would like them, but the portraits in this current project are created completely on my own terms. I am using real people and their real personalities for inspiration. (-Big thanks to my good friends who didn’t put up a fight when I begged them to model for me!) I have so far completed three of these life-size portraits and I have four others in progress. It is a new direction that I am very excited about.

Finally, what does living unchained mean to you?
Living unchained can mean many things, but to me, it means following your gifts and your passions without fear. The fear of failure can be overwhelming at times and I fall victim to it as easily as does anyone else, but it is important to me to not let that fear paralyze myself from action. I plan to give my art everything that I have and I’ll know then that I tried. The worst case scenario is that I never make it big, but I do know I will have created some beautiful things along the way and that’s okay with me.

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