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Opinion The Last Word

Don’t Destroy the Mural: Public Art Should Make Us Think

Memphis has some amazing murals. My favorites are musical: the blink-and-you’ll-miss it “That’s How Strong My Love Is” at Third and Vance; the history of soul in Barboro Alley; “These Arms of Mine” off Lamar; the Soulsville gateway on Bellevue. I love the enthusiastic and pure homemade tributes to our local sports teams too, especially the bootlegged paintings of ill-proportioned tigers and misshapen grizzlies.

These pieces tell a neighborhood’s story: who lived here, what happened, where to find hot wings and cold beer. All stories have conflicts and characters. Some are tragedies, some have happy endings.

Over the past decade or so, a different kind of mural started appearing — still pretty, but inorganic, generic. Follow the line of people waiting to take pictures for Instagram if you want to find one. At least one wall in every city is tattooed with a pair of wings, so tourists can be butterflies and birds while they show their friends back home how much fun they’re having. These murals don’t really tell a story, besides perhaps that someone read a Richard Florida book and was persuaded to put catnip out for the kinds of people they hope to attract. Art doesn’t have to be deep when the alternative is an ugly wall.

Memphis has space for both kinds of murals. Thousands of bare walls, in fact. So there is absolutely no good reason to replace the 89-foot-tall civil rights mural at the corner of South Main and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue. It may seem trivial in the grand scheme of things, but the fact that the possibility has even been considered is yet another milestone in the city’s impressive legacy of finding innovative ways to screw up the easiest wins. I’d like to submit an amendment to the new slogan: “Memphis, Home of Blues, Soul, Rock-and-Roll, and Actually, Y’know, We Didn’t Really Think This Through.”

The mural captivates passersby with a powerful primer of the region’s real story. Local children who visit the area for basketball games and Orpheum field trips can see themselves reflected in the figures depicted, instead of sanitized and whitewashed textbook accounts. Yet people allegedly have complained that the modern family depicted at the bottom, a woman and two children described in The Commercial Appeal as “fatherless” look “sad.” That’s open to interpretation, but why wouldn’t they be sad? They have plenty of reasons not to smile; go to half the population of the city and you’ll find them. Maybe they’re offended to have been presumed fatherless. Maybe they’re just hot.

The city commemorated the 50th anniversary of the MLK assassination three months ago by asking, “Where do we go from here?” Must we return to our regularly scheduled programming so quickly? Black history is Memphis history, and erasing it — in this case, literally — signals an enduring unwillingness to confront the issues still stifling progress. Do we want to spend our bicentennial toasting decades of boneheaded decisions and crippling inequity, or charting a blueprint for creating 200 years of justice?

I’m no art critic, but if a mural makes people uneasy about the state of civil rights in 2018, that’s probably its intent. Painting over a thoughtful and provocative piece of art because some baby boomers didn’t like seeing a tiny “Black Lives Matter” during their novelty trolley ride sends an ugly message to the people who live here. This is reality. If tourists are uncomfortable, they can stroll down to Beale Street for a Big Ass Beer to cleanse their palates before they take selfies in front of a sign that says “Everything Is Fine.”

The city and UrbanArt Commission may swear up and down the motivation for repainting has nothing to do with the inscription, but they’ll need to give a better explanation than what has been provided so far. Historians’ nitpicking about unspecified inaccuracies is weak: We know Union soldiers didn’t wear seafoam and Robert Church’s face wasn’t purple. If the mural wasn’t meant to stay on that wall forever, why was it permanently installed? Why did the artists — Derrick Dent and Michael Roy, aka Birdcap — spend months planning, designing, creating, and installing something only to see it destroyed after two years? What a waste. If there’s another artist lined up and another idea in the works, great. Find another wall and put it there. Let us have nice things — and leave that gorgeous mural alone.

Jen Clarke is an unapologetic Memphian and digital marketing specialist.


Editor’s Note: As the Flyer went to press on Tuesday, Mayor Strickland’s spokesperson, Kyle Veazey, stated that the mayor would not allow the mural to be taken down.

Categories
Art Exhibit M

Best Art Instagrams of the Week: Flyer Round-up

Wondering which Memphis-based (or Memphis-originated) artists to follow on Instagram? Allow us to help.

Filmmaker and sculptor Brian Pera (@brian__pera) is currently in production on a film project dubbed “Sorry Not Sorry”, featuring fellow artists Terri Phillips and Joel Parsons. 

Best Art Instagrams of the Week: Flyer Round-up

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Johnathan Robert Payne (@johnrobertpayne) and D’Angelo Lovell Williams (@limitedomnishit) collaborated on a series of photographs and drawings that were on view at First Congregational Church earlier this week. 

Thank you to everyone who came out tonight! It meant a lot to @limitedomnishit and I. #roomtolet

A photo posted by Johnathan Payne (@johnrobertpayne) on

Best Art Instagrams of the Week: Flyer Round-up (2)

Kong Wee Pang (@kongweepang) and Jay Crum (@crumjay) installed “Walking Eyes”, a collaborative series of works on paper and fabric, at Crosstown Arts. 

Best Art Instagrams of the Week: Flyer Round-up (3)

Memphis-bred cartoonist and illustrator Derrick Dent (@dentslashink) lives in New York now, but that hasn’t changed his quick draw style. 

Avoiding any copyright issues, I'll just call this People Folks of New York City Place.

A photo posted by Derrick Dent (@dentslashink) on

Best Art Instagrams of the Week: Flyer Round-up (4)

Another Memphis trained artist-to-watch: Rhodes grad Esther Ruiz, whose glow-y neon sculptures are making waves in NYC. 

i've been in here 13 hours, last one

A photo posted by @esther___ruiz on

Best Art Instagrams of the Week: Flyer Round-up (5)

Hamlett Dobbins (@hamlettdobbins) is making colorful and wonderful summer drawings. 

Summer drawing 2015.

A photo posted by Hamlett Dobbins (@hamlettdobbins) on

Best Art Instagrams of the Week: Flyer Round-up (6)

Think your Instagram should be featured on our weekly art round-up? Let me know: eileen@contemporary-media.com. 

Categories
News News Blog

Memphis Comic Expo Makes a Splash In its First Year

Artist Derrick Dent at the Memphis Comic Expo

  • Artist Derrick Dent at the Memphis Comic Expo

The first-ever Memphis Comic Expo debuted this year to throngs of comic fans looking to buy comic books, meet artists and authors, and revel with other fans. The inaugural year’s lineup included over 35 guests in the art and fiction world, hailing from all over the country. Even wrestler Jerry Lawler was a guest, displaying his Batmobile — a replica of the 1966 car Adam West and Burt Ward drove in the 1960s-era “Batman” TV show.

With the expo aligned in rows, comic book fans bobbed and weaved around cosplayers, large comic book collections, action figure displays, and huge art presentations. A podcast was even being recorded live on-site from the folks at Black Nerd Power, a podcast featuring thoughts on the science fiction and fantasy world from a black perspective.

Attendees could also commission a piece of art from an illustrator during the expo, get an autograph, or purchase completed pieces directly.

One Memphis artist, Derrick Dent, sold his illustrations as well as pieces that had been previously commissioned as part of the annual Bikesploitation event that had its fourth year last May. Dent has been illustrating since he was in college, and he was first commissioned his junior year. His style was originally influenced by “a lot of manga and a lot of video game art,” he said.

“I was a really big fan of traditional cartoonists, and I understood what they were doing was a form of drawing, but it was a magical kind of thing,” Dent said. “It was so clean and precise.”

The fast-talking artist brought his work to sell as well as promote, offering a table-length’s worth of art that attendees could view.

“A lot of my work is really kinetic,” Dent said. “There’s a confident line to my work that I think people are attracted to. There’s a sense of tradition because I do a lot of brush and ink drawings. That’s a timeless way of creating images — I don’t think it’s going anywhere anytime soon. I handle black-and-white images very well, and I think that’s always been a strength of mine.”

During the interview, Dent was working on an Elvis illustration — one that he admitted later to its recipient that it might have been more Johnny Cash.

Comic books were not the only facet of nerd culture at the expo. Science fiction and fantasy author Cecilia King was promoting her novel, Take It to the City in the Sky. King is also from Memphis and said she’s been writing since she was little. Her novel features a teenager named Avi, a juvenile delinquent in the year 3047 who has been arrested for the third time — this one revolving around drugs.

Even if comics were the overarching theme, any self-proclaimed nerd could have found his or her fill at the expo. The Memphis Comic Expo now joins the growing number of nerdy and geeky conventions, exhibitions, and gatherings staking their claim in the Mid-South.

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