St. Ann’s Warehouse & Supremacy Project Present Second Public Art Exhibition


St. Ann's Warehouse & Supremacy Project Present Second Public Art Exhibition

St. Ann’s Warehouse and Supremacy Project (Julian Alexander and Khadijat Oseni), just in time for Black History Month, have installed a new outdoor public art exhibition that goes to the heart of white supremacy, addressing “the systemic oppression and violence BIPOC communities are fighting to end through art.”

The exhibition consists of two complementary installations. The first of these, We the People, features images of transcendent Black beauty by Lagos-based photographer Adeolu Osibodu and haikus by Cyrus Aaron, Mahogany L. Browne, and Justin El (each of whom contributed to Michael Boyd‘s Lost Ones. Culture Found exhibit from Supremacy Project last year). Curator Khadijat Oseni says, “We The People reexamines the American Constitution’s exclusion of Black people with the Three-Fifths compromise. Through words and images conjuring ancestral memory, Black humanity is centered and presented as strong, vulnerable, whole. This juxtaposition sets off a meditation on the American myth.”

Artist Julian Alexander anchors this sea of diasporic voices with a text-only piece of art: “ALWAYS BEEN 5/5 a ____.”, serving as a meditative pause and update on the iconic “I AM A MAN” signage that has since become synonymous with the fight for social justice. Both the homage and style of Alexander’s innovation reside in a similar framework as the genesis of the original slogan and sign which was first widely-made popular at the Memphis Sanitation strike of 1968, the last strike led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. days before his assassination.

The original sign’s language comes from Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man. The full quote reads, “I am an invisible man. I am a man of substance, of flesh and bone, fibre and liquids – and I might even be said to possess a mind. I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me.”

Julian Alexander’s new signage picks up the baton from where the essential workers of the 1960s Civil rights movement left off by recontextualizing as well as leaving an open space at the end for active participation from on-lookers across all marginalized groups – regardless of culture, gender and sexuality, to aid in the collective reversion of America’s promise.

The exhibition’s other installation is a new iteration in the Supremacy Project series Supremacy: Who Protects Me from You? Whereas the first Who Protects Me from You? installation focused on the U.S. government’s executive branch (depicted as Mount Rushmore) and judicial branch (as riot police), the new work, in the St. Ann’s Warehouse archways on Dock Street, trains its lens on the legislative branch, portraying January 6, 2021 as one of countless days in a long history of white supremacist violence.

The events at the Capitol are explosively captured by Mel D. Cole and Reuters photographer Leah Millis, and contextualized by Julian Alexander. A pointed redaction by Alexander-to a quote from Republican Senator Adam Kinzinger-underscores the notion that despite the insurrection’s horror, it is but one of the countless “darkest days in American history” for non-white people.

Mel D. Cole explained to NBC News, when he showed up near the White House to document…



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