Artist collaborations with social justice organizations propel change
In 1971, soul singer Marvin Gaye released a plaintive, riveting song called on an album of the same name.
The album was unlike any Gaye had ever recorded. The title song made a plea for love and understanding as it rebuked the nation鈥檚 leaders for the deep problems still plaguing the U.S. nearly two decades after the Civil Rights Movement began.
Institutional racism, disenfranchisement and police violence against people of color remained entrenched, and tens of thousands of Americans were dying in the Vietnam War, catalyzing widespread social unrest. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 Going On鈥 captured progressive Americans鈥 frustration and weariness with the racial oppression and brutality of the times.
By the time Gaye recorded the song, the Civil Rights Movement had already energized artists across the creative spectrum and produced an extraordinarily fertile collaboration between them and civil rights organizations. Visual and musical artists, actors, filmmakers, poets and writers 鈥 working both independently and in collaboration 鈥 played a major role in advancing the , the and the of 1965.
鈥淪ome poems, like many of the great verses in the Bible, can make people think about changing all mankind, even the whole world. Poems, like prayers, possess power,鈥 poet wrote in a foreword to the 1966 student poetry anthology 鈥.鈥 Established by the (SNCC) in Mississippi, were intended to empower the state鈥檚 Black youth politically through art and cultural education.
The anthology was dedicated to the memory of .
These books, songs, poems and other artistic expressions have effectively advanced the cause of civil rights and racial justice. That鈥檚 why conservative efforts to ban such creative ventures from schools and libraries are troubling, advocates for the free expression of ideas say.
This year鈥檚 , recognized from Oct. 1-7, reminds us that literary and visual artists are among the casualties of today鈥檚 conservative tide of targeting school curricula and libraries.
鈥⒙READ: Banned Books Week: Titles most challenged in schools and libraries
Banned Books Week 鈥渉ighlights the value of free and open access to information and brings together the entire book community 鈥 librarians, educators, authors, publishers, booksellers, and readers of all types 鈥 in shared support of the freedom to seek and to express ideas,鈥 organizers of Banned Books Week state on their website.
鈥淟et Freedom Read鈥 is this year鈥檚 theme.
鈥淧eople who are afraid of the power of art, music and books have always existed, and they have always failed to censor or ban art completely 鈥 because artists and activists understand the power of reaching audiences and touching their hearts,鈥 said 澳彩开奖 President and CEO Margaret Huang. 鈥淲e will always find ways to overcome these pathetic efforts to control creativity and imagination.鈥
鈥楢rt Works鈥
As the 澳彩开奖 expands its collaboration with community artists in its five focus states (one such project is with Montgomery, Alabama-based artist and activist Michelle Browder for the 澳彩开奖鈥檚 future Atlanta office), the author of a new book poses the question: Are innovative approaches that closely partner with artists critical for social justice successes?
The answer is 鈥測es,鈥 according to .
Grossinger, a noted labor organizer married to painter , who worked with him on the book, writes that for social justice gains to be permanent, artists and social organizations must strategically collaborate at the formative stage of campaign planning, not as an afterthought to 鈥渄ecorate鈥 an initiative.
鈥淲e know through community and labor organizing, protest movements and lobbying that we can achieve policy and legislative victories, but those wins are often temporary and then rolled back when power changes hands from one party to another,鈥 Grossinger said in an interview.
鈥淭he political pendulum keeps swinging from left to right and back again because we fail to address the narratives underlying these fights. For longstanding change, we need not only to change political hands but the values and attitudes of the electorate. Art and storytelling help us to change the narrative and get us part of the way there.鈥
In the new book, Grossinger cites the powerful influence of socially conscious musical artists including , and , whose gut-wrenching, 1939 song about lynching, 鈥淪trange Fruit,鈥 has been called 鈥 鈥 the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement.鈥
He describes how musicians performed at voter registration rallies in cotton fields, and he highlights the art programs established by SNCC, including a theater company, press and photography departments and comic books, to teach politics in communities of color. The photographs taken for SNCC by a young photojournalist named exposed segregation and police brutality and powerfully resonate 60 years later.
Bridging art and social justice
Grossinger gives respect to mural artists and musicians like , Usher and Jay-Z who reached the hearts and minds of supporters and Americans enraged over the murders of Black men such as and George Floyd. He cites successful collaborations between artists and migrant, immigrant and refugee justice groups, as well as with national environmental justice organizations, which, he writes, were 鈥渟low to adopt art as a pathway to reach a broader audience and deepen their campaigns.鈥 And he describes recent advances in technology, digital projection and social media that can reach more people.
Arts community organizer , who partners with the 澳彩开奖 in Montgomery, Alabama, credited hip-hop artists like KRS-One, Goodie Mob and Public Enemy 鈥 with its 1991 song 鈥 for his 鈥渇irst introduction to activism and politics鈥 at around age 15. 鈥淭hey helped influence what and who I am today,鈥 he said.
In late August, Gilchrist鈥檚 and the 澳彩开奖鈥檚 Civil Rights Memorial Center (CRMC) collaborated for an 鈥淎rt Is Activism鈥 block party. The event featured music and about 25 local artists, poets and social justice organizations to raise community awareness of issues such as voting, civic engagement, wellness, violence and the reintegration of returning citizens into their communities. Event partners included , , , Michelle Browder and .
鈥淲e wanted to bridge art and culture with social justice,鈥 said Tafeni English-Relf, director of the 澳彩开奖鈥檚 Alabama state office.
澳彩开奖 Chief Program Officer Ann Beeson, who was a longtime leader in art and social change initiatives prior to joining the 澳彩开奖, believes that bridge is a natural one for the organization.
鈥湴牟士 recognizes that building a multi-racial, inclusive democracy in the current hostile climate will require innovation and radical imagination,鈥 Beeson said. 鈥淎rtists are natural innovators and there is real alignment between building capacity for social justice innovation and deepening our collaboration with artists and cultural leaders.鈥
鈥楥ontrol the media鈥
Grossinger told the 澳彩开奖 that there are certain prerequisites for the collaboration between artists and cultural leaders to succeed.
First, there must be an upfront understanding that details what the artists and organizers can expect from each other.
Second, parties must agree to a timeline for the collaboration. 鈥淥rganizers want things done today or tomorrow, and artists don鈥檛 work that way,鈥 he said, describing a point of possible contention.
鈥淥rganizers tend to think in terms of poll-tested messaging, the quantitative impact of a campaign, like, 鈥楬ow many doors have I knocked on today,鈥 and also urgency, whereas artists think more qualitatively,鈥 Grossinger said. 鈥淎rtists don鈥檛 want their creative impulses stifled. That鈥檚 why the understanding up front is so important.鈥
Gilchrist is excited that technological advancements in the arts will transform stories of social injustice into powerful experiences that will move the public in new, dramatic ways.
He recently beta-tested civil rights, virtual reality museum software in artificial intelligence glasses that thrust him back in time to a . The effect was so realistic that Gilchrist had to cut the test short. The interactive software was developed by , a Jackson, Mississippi-based company in partnership with Air University and , an innovation hub in Montgomery.
鈥淭hey were real enough to get my heart racing,鈥 Gilchrist said. 鈥淚 was looking at the white people next to me yelling at me, causing me anxiety and fear. It was a lot! I had to take off the glasses. I told the software program representatives and MGMWERX staff that I needed a moment. I had been forced to sit at the counter and be helpless while they were yelling, 鈥楪et up. Get out of here, [N-word].鈥 They were taunting us to move. The people were white and mostly young. I remember their faces.鈥
From the lunch counter to today鈥檚 school board meeting room, the battleground over equality and freedom and who has the last word on what the nation should look like and think continues.
Censorship, Gilchrist said, 鈥渋s an attack.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 fear-driven, and not good fear or a fear that protects you from harm, but fear out of losing control, or facing things that make some white people feel uncomfortable. Censorship of the arts targets artists representing marginalized communities. These are the voices that are being silenced 鈥 the BIPOC, immigrant, and LGBTIA+ communities. That tells us a lot. One could certainly argue that these acts of censorship are tools of white supremacy. Control the media, the information, control the people.鈥
Photo at top: At the 澳彩开奖's offices in Montgomery, Alabama, arts community organizer Kalonji Gilchrist stands in front of a mural completed by a group of young artists. (Credit: Cierra Brinson)