Columbus College of Art and Design – Harlem Renaissance – I Too, Sing America https://cbusharlem100.org Fri, 22 Feb 2019 20:42:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 Evan’s Story https://cbusharlem100.org/evans-story/ Fri, 22 Feb 2019 20:42:30 +0000 https://cbusharlem100.org/?p=1855 A Visual Storyteller
By Hailey Stangebye
Photos courtesy of Evan Williams

Evan Williams is redefining caricatures.

His aim with these caricature-esque portraits is not to poke fun or demean, but, rather, to honor and pay tribute to cultural icons. The ultimate goal is to tell a story.

Evan’s story as an artist begins at a very young age. He says his interest in art started when he was just 8 or 9 years old. Throughout his childhood, Evan bounced from town to town whenever his father moved for his military career: Colorado, Virginia, Kentucky — even Belgium — and, ultimately, Ohio.

“My mother and father did a really good job of encouraging me and giving me the tools I needed to further myself,” Evan says. “I was always one of those kids who, when given the choice, would stay in the house to draw and paint. I’ve always been a more creative type.”

“I was always one of those kids who, when given the choice, would stay in the house to draw and paint. I’ve always been a more creative type.”

In high school, Evan became more serious about his craft. That was due, in part, to the influence of a few memorable teachers who empowered him to pursue his passion. He went on to graduate from the Columbus College of Art and Design (CCAD) and, today, he’s a visual storyteller in this city.

After a hiatus from his pursuit of the arts, Evan returned to his craft about 10 months ago.

“I got my art pad out and started sketching again. Then, I got my computer out and I created my own brushes in Photoshop. I started playing around and dusting the rust off, and I’ve just been seeing a lot of returns on my efforts,” Evan says.

In Oct. 2018, Evan became a RAW artist. RAW is an international community of creatives that hosts platforms for expression both online and off.

“Right after Thanksgiving, RAW had a big event here, locally. I got into that event. It was a huge show, and I got a lot of great feedback from it,” Evan says. “Since that, I’ve been trying to pump out as much stuff as I can.”

Evan is accepting commission pieces, working on a children’s book and selling prints. He also reached out to Columbus businesses — tattoo parlours, coffee houses, barber shops and more — to hang his work around the city. So far, the response is encouraging.

“It’s kind of weird to see someone react in an overwhelmingly excited way about something I’ve made. It’s not that I don’t appreciate it, I do,” Evan says. “It’s just unusual to see something you create that can generate so much joy and laughter and happiness in someone’s life. That’s rare.”

“It’s kind of weird to see someone react in an overwhelmingly excited way about something I’ve made. It’s not that I don’t appreciate it, I do. It’s just unusual to see something you create that can generate so much joy and laughter and happiness in someone’s life. That’s rare.”

 

 

 

Evan’s Work

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Cameron’s Story https://cbusharlem100.org/camerons-story/ Tue, 14 Aug 2018 14:25:34 +0000 https://cbusharlem100.org/?p=933 Standing Together
By Hailey Stangebye
Photos & videos courtesy of Cameron Granger

Cameron Granger didn’t expect to find a community in Columbus.

When he came from Cleveland to study at the Columbus College of Art and Design, he knew he wanted to major in the cinematic arts. But he didn’t know just how much he would learn outside of the classroom from his network and mentors.

“I don’t think I realized it at first, but I’m a very community-oriented person. I thrive in close knit communities,” Cameron says. “When I first came to Columbus, Maroon Arts — Marshall Shorts, David Butler and them — they were the first people to ever embrace me and see value in what I was doing. I had a really hard time when I first got here, and they took me under their wing and assured me that this was for me.”

I don’t think I realized it at first, but I’m a very community-oriented person. I thrive in close knit communities. When I first came to Columbus, Maroon Arts — Marshall Shorts, David Butler and them — they were the first people to ever embrace me and see value in what I was doing. I had a really hard time when I first got here, and they took me under their wing and assured me that this was for me.

He Say She Say from Cameron Granger on Vimeo.

Without such a support system, Cameron says he probably would have left Columbus a long time ago. Now he’s learned to thrive in this arts community, but that journey wasn’t easy.

“Art is a primarily white field. Film is a primarily white field,” Cameron says. “I think, for a long time, it was hard for people to take what I was doing seriously. I would show certain things and there wouldn’t be a discussion around it. It seemed like people were afraid to or didn’t know how to engage with what I was making. It was really disheartening.”

Art is a primarily white field. Film is a primarily white fieldI think, for a long time, it was hard for people to take what I was doing seriously. I would show certain things and there wouldn’t be a discussion around it. It seemed like people were afraid to or didn’t know how to engage with what I was making. It was really disheartening.

That realization was all the more disheartening because Cameron uses his works to tell a story and to generate dialogue. He first discovered that he could speak through video in high school.

FIRE!! – Teaser Trailer from Cameron Granger on Vimeo.

Prior to creating films, Cameron followed in the footsteps of his mother and grandmother by writing and drawing. Then he took a class that changed the trajectory of his life.

“Everything I was struggling to say through writing and drawing, I was able to say really easily through video,” Cameron says. “It was this perfect merging of the two.”

Everything I was struggling to say through writing and drawing, I was able to say really easily through video. It was this perfect merging of the two.

Initially, Cameron focused his energy on traditional film projects. That changed when he joined the MINT Collective, a local artist collective. Those friends and peers encouraged him to create installation and studio-based films.

“My work is an exploration into the media that I watched growing up — various representations of black men in movies, music, tv shows. I see what impact they had on me, and then everyone around me,” Cameron says. “I’m using the micro of myself to speak to the larger macro of a whole.”

Invisible Man from Cameron Granger on Vimeo.

Cameron says that he often feels pressured to create specific types of work because of the color of skin.

“When people see black folks making art, there’s a tendency to slap hot button topics like police brutality or other things to it, and I’m not interested in doing that right now,” Cameron says. “I’ve made things like that before and I think those are very important to exist, but I’m not really interested in talking about them right now.”

When people see black folks making art, there’s a tendency to slap hot button topics like police brutality or other things to it, and I’m not interested in doing that right now. I’ve made things like that before and I think those are very important to exist, but I’m not really interested in talking about them right now.

One of his latest projects is a mural in the Short North, which is a still from his film called “Urn, Or Another Way To Say I Love You.” The film is about the space between “you” and the thing you “love.”

“The more things you do to shorten the space or gap between ‘you’ and the thing you ‘love,’ the more you become what you’re trying to protect that love from,” Cameron says. That idea is particularly relevant for black artists showing work in the Short North.

“The love that I, and perhaps other black artists, have for these experiences that we’re talking about in our work, we want to cherish that; but we also want to share that,” Cameron says. “That’s the commodification of this love. In putting this work up on the wall in a part of town that is primarily white, we wonder how that’s going to be taken. And now that it’s all up in the wild, what do you do about that?”

Cameron has clear goals for the function of these murals.

“I just want to keep the momentum going,” Cameron says. “I don’t want the images that are up to be just backdrops for selfies. I want to think more about how to activate them. I think I was resting on my laurels a bit in regards to Columbus and seeing this has re-energized me to do more here.”

I just want to keep the momentum going. I don’t want the images that are up to be just backdrops for selfies. I want to think more about how to activate them. I think I was resting on my laurels a bit in regards to Columbus and seeing this has re-energized me to do more here.

 

 

 

 


Cameron is a part of the Short North Mural Series. You can find his mural, Urn, Or Another Way To Say I Love You, at 777 N. Wall Street.

Cameron’s Work

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