(clockwise from above)
“Unbound,” collage on canvas, 2023; “Bus Stop,” collage on canvas,
2012; “Walter, Age 10,” from “Out of Wonder,” collage on paper, 2009;
“Sufficient Grace – Ms. Ivy Beckles,” collage on canvas, 2010. This is the sixth in a weekly series presenting highlights of conversations between leading Black visual artists in New England. In this week’s podcast, L’Merchie Frazier interviews collage artist and children’s book illustrator Ekua Holmes. The interview has been condensed and slightly edited.
A Roxbury native who is the
recipient of several honors, including the coveted Coretta Scott King
Award for book illustration in 2018 and 2019, Holmes recently exhibited
her work at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston and currently serves as
commissioner and vice-chair of the Boston Arts Commission.
L’Merchie
Frazier: Ekua, you describe yourself as a Roxbury girl. What is
significant to you about Roxbury that has shaped your voice?
Ekua
Holmes: I always like to start out by honoring my parents. When I talk
about who I am, I talk about who they were. So first I mention my
mother. My third-grade teacher told her, “I think your daughter has
talent in the arts.” I always tell people, nobody wanted their child to
be an artist in the 1960s. People wanted doctors, lawyers, secretaries
and nurses. Artists? That meant starvation. So I always like to thank my
mother. She didn’t push me into the arts, but she didn’t put up
obstacles for me. She started taking me to the MFA on Saturdays.
Ruth
Batson, Elma Lewis, Ellen Jackson and Harry Elam — all visionary
tree-shakers, jelly makers and strivers — lived in my neighborhood at
the time of my growing up. And I think, collectively, they decided
that they were going to lift my generation up into another world view. I
was a student of Elma Lewis. She’s known for her school of dance and
fine arts, but she gave us so much more. You learned about Africa,
African dance and drumming. You learned how to stand, how to project
your voice and how to not be silly, because she couldn’t stand silly. I
consider her a great role model. She was a child of Garveyism, and
everything she did was about “Do for Self.” So I try to work in that
tradition.
Many artists are very romantic and passionate about becoming artists. We see that
passion in your work. But many reflect the sentiment of not
participating in art for profit or financial gain.
That’s
an old idea. I don’t know how far back, but art was an elitist thing.
Your parents had money, so you could paint. But for us, it was the
spirit talking to us and moving through us. And I always said I would
make art whether I got paid or not. It’s who I am, and it’s what I came
here to do. The fact that I can craft a livelihood from it means that I
can support other people who want to do it.
I
remember meeting you at your business in your home in Dorchester, as
you were representing artists, displaying their work and selling it, and
admiring that you had this business sense. Where’s the line drawn for
you with respect to being that businesswoman and the practice of art for
its own rewarding sake?
When
I came out of college with a degree in photography, I really didn’t
understand the fine art world. I came out and did some stuff for the Bay
State Banner, some weddings and some concerts. I thought, this is not
going to work for me. So, I taught myself graphic design. I didn’t have
self-confidence when I left college, but I could see that the world
needed Black art. It needed our expression. Instead of waiting for
someone else to do it, it was something that I could do in my home. One
day I woke up and said, “I want to do my own artwork.” It wasn’t that
long ago. I saw a void. People were so appreciative and thirsty for
these images and felt so proud. It was very fulfilling.
What
makes your work so compelling is this compositional sense that you
share with us in memory, nostalgia, storytelling — fostering a sense of
comfort. As we take in images that you create, the strength is there,
yet, at the same time, there’s vulnerability. Can you speak to that?
I
don’t think I ever thought about my work as showing my own
vulnerability. I think of it as a reflection of the family and the
community that I grew up in. I shine a light on what appears to be a
mundane moment but is very magical. Recently, I brought in this idea of
magic, because life is magical. I think when I look at my family — I use
some of my family photos in my work — it’s like exploring them. They’re
all gone now. So I’m looking at these photographs and asking questions
about how they became the person they became, and how can I imagine what
they were like as children? When I go back home, I’m going to look at
my work and ask, “Is this showing my vulnerability?”
See more of Ekua Holmes’ work and watch the full interview at BayStateBanner.com/art-gallery