Columbus Museum of Art – Harlem Renaissance – I Too, Sing America https://cbusharlem100.org Tue, 23 Oct 2018 15:44:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 DonCee’s Story https://cbusharlem100.org/doncees-story/ https://cbusharlem100.org/doncees-story/#comments Tue, 23 Oct 2018 15:44:31 +0000 https://cbusharlem100.org/?p=1485 Telling stories through fabric
By Hailey Stangebye
Photos courtesy of Don Coulter

Don “DonCee” Coulter remembers meeting Earvin “Magic” Johnson like it was yesterday.

Don was only 9 or 10 years old, but he knew that he loved basketball. What he didn’t know, was that his chance meeting with “Magic” Johnson would ultimately launch him toward his future career  not as a basketball player, but as an artist.

“He gave us a pep talk and he had talked about how much he wanted to be an NBA basketball player as a kid,” Don says. “I remember this story well. He said, ‘If it was snowing, I had my basketball and I had a shovel. It was raining, I had my basketball and I had my umbrella.’ And he talked about how he would be there from the morning all the way until night playing basketball.”

“I remember this story well. He said, ‘If it was snowing, I had my basketball and I had a shovel. It was raining, I had my basketball and I had my umbrella.’ And he talked about how he would be there from the morning all the way until night playing basketball.”

Armed with inspiration from such a legend, Don set out to be just like Earvin. He was so motivated that, at the start, he went out to practice basketball every day. But as the days wore on, so did his motivation. Meanwhile, Don would use his downtime to create art.

“One day it kind of dawned on me: If I want to play basketball, I always have to remember what Earvin said to motivate me. But no one ever had to motivate me to do art. This is something that comes to me naturally,” Don says. “And that’s why, at a young age, I realized this is what I really want to do. I am an artist.”

“But no one ever had to motivate me to do art. This is something that comes to me naturally. And that’s why, at a young age, I realized this is what I really want to do. I am an artist.”

Fast forward to today, and Don’s art was featured on the invitation to one of Columbus’ most famous events for the arts: the Columbus Museum of Art’s Art Celebration. Not only was his portrait of Donna and Larry James on display at the museum, it was adapted into an augmented reality work through a collaboration with Ariel Peguero.

Click here to see the augmented reality portion of this portrait.

Don has made incredible strides in the art community, but not without obstacles. One of his main challenges has always been his medium of choice: fabric.

“It’s pretty challenging trying to describe what I do and trying to get people to buy in to the concept,” Don says. “A lot of times, I would tell people, ‘What I do is I just paint with fabric.’ And they’re like, ‘What? What do you mean? Like you paint on the leather?’ And I’m like, ‘No. The leather is the paint.’ Trying to get that concept to people and galleries didn’t go over too well.”

Don’s medium of choice is fabric. He uses carefully cut pieces of things such as denim, leather and suede to produce multi-textured images that carry the depth of his subject matter and the history of his craft.

“I’ve been doing this for about 20 years. It initially started from growing up in the hip hop era. We began painting on clothing for the breakdancers and hip hop artists. From there, I began creating clothing and took a fashion design course,” Don says. “Eventually, that kind of led on to what I do today.”

“I’ve been doing this for about 20 years. It initially started from growing up in the hip hop era. We began painting on clothing for the breakdancers and hip hop artists. From there, I began creating clothing and took a fashion design course.”

Each piece that Don creates comes down to a narrative. The same is true of his portrait featuring Donna and Larry James: that image is a story of love, both between Donna and Larry, and between them and the arts.

“I think creating art is important because art tells a story. If you look back in history, a lot of times when we study other cultures, what’s the best way to really figure out what was really going on? You look to the arts,” Don says. “It’s more than just something that’s cosmetic. Art can also be therapeutic. It can also teach us. It tells a story, especially for those that feel like they may not have a voice.”

Don has found his voice through art and, just like Earvin with basketball, he continues to practice and hone his craft every day.

 

DonCee’s Work

 

]]>
https://cbusharlem100.org/doncees-story/feed/ 1
The ‘I, Too, Sing America’ Exhibition Opens at the Columbus Museum of Art https://cbusharlem100.org/the-i-too-sing-america-exhibition-opens-at-the-columbus-museum-of-art/ Sun, 21 Oct 2018 16:41:16 +0000 https://cbusharlem100.org/?p=1478 The I, Too, Sing America Exhibition
By Hailey Stangebye

Yesterday, the highly anticipated I, Too, Sing America exhibition opened at the Columbus Museum of Art. It represents years of careful curation and collaboration.

Moreover, this exhibition was the catalyst for the broader discussion that led to this citywide celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Harlem Renaissance in Columbus. It all started a few years ago at the Lincoln Theatre. Wil Haygood was in town hosting a discussion on the release of his most recent publication, Showdown: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court Nomination That Changed America.

Larry James introduced Haygood and, in the audience, the director of the Columbus Museum of Art, Nannette Maciejunes, listened attentively.

“I realized that so much of what Wil had done in his writing kept circling back and touching on the Harlem Renaissance,” Nannette says. “I got the idea that maybe we could invite Wil to be the guest curator of an exhibition here at the museum on the Harlem Renaissance as it approached its hundredth birthday.”

“I got the idea that maybe we could invite Wil to be the guest curator of an exhibition here at the museum on the Harlem Renaissance as it approached its hundredth birthday.”

Luckily, the next morning, Nannette had breakfast with the late Bill Conner, who was, at the time, the director at CAPA. She pitched the idea and Bill immediately pulled out his phone to call Larry James.

Within a week, Larry James, Bill Conner and Wil Haygood were all on board.

“The second thing that happened that I think was really important was an idea that Bill Conner and Larry James had from the beginning, and then Larry carried it to fruition after Bill’s death,” Nannette says. “It was this idea of turning this small idea that Nannette had about an exhibition at the museum into a citywide celebration with 30 plus partners. And I think that has made it so much bigger than it would have been had it just been a show at the museum.”

“It was this idea of turning this small idea that Nannette had about an exhibition at the museum into a citywide celebration with 30 plus partners. And I think that has made it so much bigger than it would have been had it just been a show at the museum.”

The citywide celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Harlem Renaissance quickly became more than a commemoration of the history of the movement. While this rich history is a crucial component, it also became a living, breathing platform for modern expression that will continue to shape the culture in Columbus.

The museum exhibition reflects that nuanced vitality. It’s about the history of the Harlem Renaissance, but it’s also about the ripple effect that the movement had on American culture.

“We do lots of different kinds of exhibitions,” Nannette says. “What’s distinctive about this one is that it’s a very personal reflection on the Harlem Renaissance. It is about a writer and a thinker who has spent much of his career thinking about how this subject of the Harlem Renaissance intersects with other things that he’s working on. It’s a lifetime of that thinking and that personal reflection on the meaning of the Harlem Renaissance to him in the 21st century that really distinguishes this exhibition.”

“It’s a lifetime of that thinking and that personal reflection on the meaning of the Harlem Renaissance to him in the 21st century that really distinguishes this exhibition.”

The I, Too, Sing America exhibition will be on view through January 20, 2019. With the rich layers of artistic expression around every corner, you could spend multiple visits exploring all that this show has to offer. Nannette says that this exhibit — and art in general — is much more than a luxury.

“I think that the arts are the best of us,” Nannette says. “We throw that phrase of ‘quality of life’ around. Art is so much more than the quality of life. It’s fundamental to life… You take one breath, and you begin to get art. We are aesthetic beings that make things that have to be beautiful, that have to communicate, that have to have meaning. That’s the essence of human life. It’s the essence of being human.”

“We throw that phrase of ‘quality of life’ around. Art is so much more than the quality of life. It’s fundamental to life… You take one breath, and you begin to get art. We are aesthetic beings that make things that have to be beautiful, that have to communicate, that have to have meaning. That’s the essence of human life. It’s the essence of being human.”

For more information on when you can experience the exhibition for yourself, click here.

]]>
Larry and Donna James https://cbusharlem100.org/larry-and-donna-james/ https://cbusharlem100.org/larry-and-donna-james/#comments Thu, 18 Oct 2018 13:03:37 +0000 https://cbusharlem100.org/?p=1473 The Visionaries
By Hailey Stangebye

Today, the Columbus Museum of Art hosts its annual Art Celebration.

Every year, this gala is an opportunity to pay tribute to the arts in Columbus, as well as to the dedicated individuals who make it possible for the arts to flourish. This year, the Art Celebration will honor Donna and Larry James.

Longtime supporters of the arts, Donna and Larry acted as the catalyst for our city-wide celebration, “I, Too, Sing America: The Harlem Renaissance at 100.” In addition to their work on this movement, they also created the city’s first leadership program for African Americans, revitalized the Lincoln Theater and established the Center for Healthy Families.

In addition to their work on this movement, they also created the city’s first leadership program for African Americans, revitalized the Lincoln Theater and established the Center for Healthy Families.

Thanks to their dedication, Columbus as a city is able to collectively celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Harlem Renaissance. Their vision led to gallery exhibitions, dance performances, poems, songs and even a trip from Columbus to Harlem, which will be documented in the upcoming My Great Day in Harlem docuseries. 

A portrait by Don “DonCee” Coulter of Donna and Larry James, which was used as the invitation for this year’s Art Celebration. This piece incorporates layers upon layers of textured fabric. It’s also an augmented reality portrait that comes to life when you use this application on your smart device.

 

More importantly, Donna and Larry have created a movement that will outlast the tenure of this campaign. Through their generosity, local, African American artists now have a myriad of valuable relationships with the movers and shakers in the Columbus arts world. They’ve created platforms for education, exposure and expression that will leave a lasting impact of Columbus as a whole.  

Thank you, Donna and Larry, for all that you’ve done and continue to do to make Columbus thrive.

 


As a part of Donna and Larry’s initiative, the Columbus Museum of Art will open their landmark exhibit — I, Too, Sing America: The Harlem Renaissance at 100 — on Saturday, October 20. For more information on the opening events, click here.

]]>
https://cbusharlem100.org/larry-and-donna-james/feed/ 1
Good Day Columbus on the Harlem Renaissance https://cbusharlem100.org/good-day-columbus-on-the-harlem-renaissance/ Fri, 28 Sep 2018 12:58:02 +0000 https://cbusharlem100.org/?p=1415 Our city-wide celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Harlem Renaissance in Columbus continues to gain momentum. In preparation for the Columbus Museum of Art’s upcoming exhibit on the Harlem Renaissance, Good Day Columbus interviewed some key figures in the campaign to learn more.

Nannette Maciejunes, executive director of the Columbus Museum of Art, and Tripp Fontane, the spoken-word poet, represented the Harlem Renaissance campaign on Good Morning Columbus for their show on Thursday, Sept. 27, 2018.

This feature is a small taste of the wealth of experiences and moments we’ve created — and continue to create — to celebrate the anniversary of the Harlem Renaissance. In the coming weeks, we’ll release the stories of each artist who traveled from Columbus to Harlem, including the story of Tripp Fontane.

]]>