For Us, By Us w/ Dr. Fahamu Pecou and Stephanie Fleming
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What does it look like to have an art institution built for Black artists and audiences throughout the diaspora? Today we talk about the African Diaspora Art Museum of Atlanta (ADAMA) with founder, Dr Fahamu Pecou and interim village chief, Stephanie Flemming. This is not a Black version of a white museum. It’s a space that honors, uplifts, and celebrates the culture of the diaspora. We talk about the programs like the Bridge Residency and PassPortal, how to build a new institution, and connecting with Blackness around the world. More of that good art talk that we do right here on the Noize! Listen, subscribe, and share!
Episode 154 topics include:
African Diaspora Art Museum of Atlanta
diversity in institutions
Adama Bridge Residency
PassPortal
connecting with Blackness around the world
cultural exchange
physical museum spaces vs virtual spaces
building an institution
STEPHANIE FLEMING, Interim Village Chief of ADAMA
I am a first generation American from an innovative pair of Jamaican immigrant parents. I am passionate about how people of African descent construct identity and discover agency in a world that insists upon misconstrued narratives. I love working with ADAMA because it feels like home and the institutional extension of my art practice. For me ADAMA is where I can bring my whole self with joy, as a Jamaican Black woman, an artist, a storyteller, facilitator, and cultivator.
DR. FAHAMU PECOU, Founder of ADAMA
I am an interdisciplinary artist and scholar whose works combine observations on hip-hop, fine art, and popular culture to address concerns around contemporary representations of Black men. Through paintings, performance art, and academic work, I confront the performance of Black masculinity and Black identity, challenging and expanding the reading, performance and expressions of Blackness.
See More: adamatl.org + ADAMA IG @adama_atl
Jamaal Barber: @JBarberStudio
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