Point Comfort Closing Party| Hosted by Bisa Butler & Hampton Art Lovers

Schedule

Sat Dec 04 2021 at 09:00 pm to Sun Dec 05 2021 at 01:00 am

Location

Historic Ward Rooming House | Miami, FL

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Point Comfort Art Fair + Show | Hosted by Bisa Butler & Hampton Art Lovers | Rare Grooves Closing Party featuring Six Mills (DJ)
About this Event

POINT COMFORT 2021 Host & Cultural Ambassador : Newark artist Bisa Butler

Bisa Butler's cultural impact may one day surpass her artistic impact. In her work she is telling the story— The African American side— of this American life. Her use of vintage photos to bring light to untold stories through the medium of quilting is not just art. Butler’s works build on a long tradition, African-American women were needed for spinning, weaving, sewing and quilting on plantations and in other wealthy households in the antebellum south. Bisa's work today is beyond art, and we're honored that she is our cultural ambassador.

Our Closing Party is in celebration of her cultural impact over the past year. Bisa held her first solo exhibition of her career at the Katona and Art Institute of Chicago.

Bisa Butler

Bisa is using her “portrait quilts” to tell a new story. Butler is a former art teacher who is now being hailed as a modern day griot. Inspired by the dressmaking of her mother and grandmother, Butler began creating quilt art. Her vividly detailed portraits, all stitched with fabric, re-imagine the lives of the real life subjects they portray.


The artist sources her material from real life photos, telling stories of those who have been forgotten or re-imagining historical figures. The sepia toned picture of Harriet Tubman that she transformed into a beautiful portrait quilt, currently on display at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History & Culture. “When I find photos online or in the databases of Black people who are unnamed and unknown, I feel like I owe it to them to try to sort of ascertain what was their identity,” Butler said.


She has shown her work locally, curating beautiful pieces like the cover art for “Me Too” activist Tarana J. Burke’s new book Unbound, and getting pieces acquired at a few museums. Now, the Howard University alumna has reached a huge milestone in her career. Recently, she showcased her first solo exhibit at a major museum, The Art Institute of Chicago.


“Seeing my artwork at home and in my studio was one thing, but seeing it in this location is just completely mind blowing...When I first started making quilts, they were not considered fine art, they were considered craft...I think that historically quilt-work, craft work, has been marginalized because it was the work of women, and it was the work of people of color. It was considered like domestic labor,”


She is now taking the opportunity to not only celebrate the craft but also the beauty of the Black lives they depict. Her life sized portraits are surreal, with Butler believing that each holds emotion because of the meticulousness of the process and the emotion she evokes into it. For those who view her work, Butler said there is a bit of an exchange between the portrait and the viewer : “I love the idea that the images that I’m making are looking back out at me. So there’s like an intimacy there and it's a confrontation too. I like the idea that there’s this dialogue between the subjects and the observers...I use the color as a way to communicate. If I think that somebody seemed to be more cool, more somber, I might use shades of blues and purples. If somebody appears to be a leader or appears to be more forceful, I’m going to use more intense color,”


She currently works out of her home dining room in New Jersey, joking that the kitchen is the only place in her house that her family has full reign of. Her pieces take about six weeks on average to craft, her largest piece, “The Warmth Of Other Suns,” currently on display at the Newark Museum of Art, taking Butler a staggering seven months to finish. The quilt is 9 ft high and 12 ft wide, telling the story of Black families who migrated north from the south in search of better lives. Butler calls the quilt her baby and talks about how in her attempt to tell the story through her art, she also attempts to take care of her subjects.


“If you look at the original, he doesn’t have shoes, People wanted to travel in their very best so if he didn’t have shoes. it’s because they couldn’t afford them and that’s something that I like to give back,” Butler added.


Her work seeks to not only tell the story of who the people were, but also who they may have wanted to be. “I want people to be able to look at my work and see the humanity in it and... for people who are not Black to understand that we are all human beings and we have the same wants and desires, loves and fears. And for Black people I want them to see themselves and realize that I recognize who you are and we are the same,” Butler

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Where is it happening?

Historic Ward Rooming House, 249 Northwest 9th Street, Miami, United States

Event Location & Nearby Stays:

Tickets

USD 25.00

Hampton Art Lovers

Host or Publisher Hampton Art Lovers

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