CEPA Gallery Billboard Exhibit Celebrates Black Matters

Twelve billboards feature work by artist Stacey Robinson

Buffalo, NY – CEPA Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of a new public art exhibit on August 4, taking place in another unexpected place. Twelve off-highway billboards will feature original artwork by Stacey Robinson alongside messages like #BlackHealthMatters, #BlackJoyMatters, #BlackFuturesMatter, #BlackPowerMatters, #BlackFamilyMatters, etc. A map of billboard locations can be accessed here. The full list of Black Matters statements will be revealed on CEPA’s social media pages and www.cepagallery.org, along with artwork and corresponding organizations, throughout the month of August.

Stacey Robinson, Arthur Schomburg fellow and MFA graduate from the University at Buffalo was already preparing for a show at CEPA Gallery this summer. However, the scheduled exhibit involved many interactive and immersive elements, intended to mimic the Black barber shop experience. Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, CEPA Gallery and Robinson re-imagined their collaboration swiftly and creatively.  “I always wanted to be on billboards,” says Robinson, “so there is a bit of serendipity here.”

 

Robinson is currently an Assistant Professor of Graphic Design at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign. Robinson’s art imagines futures where black people are free from colonial influences. “My goal with much of my art is to dismantle ideas of derogatory Black relations, pacificity, and docility.” Along with John Jennings, Robinson is part of the collaborative duo ‘Black Kirby,’ which explores Afro Speculative existence via the aesthetic of Jack Kirby. Robinson’s collected works reside at Modern Graphics in Berlin, Bucknell University, and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.

CEPA Gallery’s Black Matters billboard exhibit highlights the realities of systemic and institutionalized racism, focusing the public’s attention not only on the present moment and the issue of police violence, but on the many challenges, contributions and assets of Black people in our communities. The text and image cohesion intends to speak directly to local governments and communities to create dialogue around the “isms” in our society with the hope of inspiring calls to action for lessening communal inequities. “This is just the beginning,” says Lawrence Brose, Executive Director of CEPA Gallery. “We will continue to work with incredible artists like Stacey to provide low barrier access to art that connects and engages people in their communities.”

 

This is CEPA Gallery’s second public art exhibit this summer. Earlier this month, the Photography Works show opened on 20 bus shelters across the region, featuring original artwork by students of the year-long program. Both exhibits are scheduled to run until September 1, 2020.  CEPA Gallery’s Black Matters billboard exhibit is made possible through funding from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Joy of Giving Something and the Golden and Goldman Foundation Philanthropic Fund. Additional support provided by the National Endowment for the Arts, Erie County, Simple Gifts Fund, and Arts Services Initiative of Western New York. For more information, please contact elizabeth@cepagallery.org.

Related articles

Today is International Jazz Day 2024

Jazz is America’s music, a form birthed in New...

‘Accountability is here’: Ex-prosecutor predicts conviction after Trump hush money trial



Donald Trump is likely going to be convicted in the hush money cover-up case he's currently facing, but the real punishment is being forced to be a criminal defendant, a former prosecutor said Sunday.

Legal analyst and former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti appeared on MSNBC's Alex Witt Reports, where he was asked about whether or not Trump will be held accountable for any potential wrongdoing.

"Big picture, Renato, do you think some sense of accountability is near for Donald Trump, given everything in his legal sphere that is going on?" the host asked.

ALSO READ: ‘Fraudulent’: Trump tormentor Lincoln Project loses big money in cybertheft scheme

"I personally think some measure of accountability is here for Donald Trump," he responded, noting that the New York trial is likely the only one to take place before the upcoming election. "I do not think he wants to be sitting in a cold courtroom. I do not think he is enjoying this experience. I think he feels humiliated. He is being ordered around by a judge referring to him as Mr. Trump and telling him what to do. I think there is already some measure of accountability."

That being said, however, Mariotti also made a prediction about the case's conclusion.

"Do I think there is likely a conviction here? Yes, I do. Obviously that is not the only piece of this that I think has an impact on Donald trump."

Watch below or click here.

‘He looks terrible’: Trump official warns ex-president his next six months will be worse



Donald Trump may be looking bad right now, but the next six months are going to be even worse for him, according to a former official in the ex-president's administration.

Former White House communications chief Anthony Scaramucci appeared on MSNBC's Alex Witt Reports on Saturday, where he was asked about how he thinks Trump is handling the grueling schedule that accompanies his criminal trial and presidential campaign. He has previously warned Trump about a financial "avalanche" that is going to hit him.

On MSNBC Saturday, the host asked Scaramucci about how Trump, who is used to drinking "up to a dozen" Diet Cokes per day, is doing.

ALSO READ: A criminologist explains why Trump’s Manhattan trial is the biggest threat to his freedom

"I mean, this guy is eight years older than he was when you were spending that kind of time with him," the host added.

Scaramucci replied, "You know, he looks terrible."

"I mean, who is kidding who? The question, though, is what is going to be the aftermath of this? ... he probably doesn't go to jail. Let's say the worst thing happens to him, he will probably be confined. I don't think they would put a former president in jail, he'd probably end up with an embarrassing ankle bracelet and will have to campaign over Zoom for a period of time. But, it is embarrassing."

Scaramucci went on to say the "real question" is, "How is this man still standing for president? And what does it say about you if you are supporting Mr. Trump at this moment in U.S. history?"

"I would really caution people about all of this. I think the next six months for Mr. Trump are going to be worse for him than the prior six months."

Watch below or click the link here.

Here’s Your 2024 Borderland Music & Art Festival Playlist

  The post Here’s Your 2024 Borderland Music & Art...

UB Statement on arrests by UB Police following protest on North Campus Wednesday

BUFFALO, N.Y. – Approximately 50 people — some of them...