Antigua

I was born here in Minnesota, and have lived here my entire life, but my parents moved here only a few months before I was born. This complicates the answer to the question, "Where are you from?" I call Cottage Grove, MN home, and technically I come from St. Paul Children's Hospital, but I trace my family lineage back to the small Caribbean island of Antigua. Both my parents were born there, and spent their formative years there. My grandparents emigrated from neighboring islands before them, and a few generations before that you would likely have to ask the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade. 

I and my siblings have gotten the chance to visit Antigua every few years since we were little, and I am struck by the curious relationship we have with the island, somewhere between quasi-expatriate Antiguans and foreign tourists. Antigua's economy relies mainly on tourism, and polished  resorts on white sand beaches are the images that the island projects beyond its shores, and the spaces that most visitors inhabit. When my family visits however, we stay in my grandmother's house on a plot of land that used to grow sugar cane. We spend some days at the beach, but more often we are in my aunts car, driving to various parts of the island to see my father's cousins, or an old school friend of my mother. We get to see less curated parts of the island that are removed from the paradise imagery that Antigua exports to lodge itself in our imagination and culture.

I am working on a piece about Antigua, and I called my grandmother a few days ago in hopes of hearing some stories about her life on the island. I wanted to get a sense of the daily reality of existing in that environment. Gran is starting to have some memory loss, so my aunt was in the background egging her on and trying to jog her memory, but she told me about the intersecting streets she lived on after she married my grandfather, and the neighbors, and how you could see the ocean at the end of the street if you stepped out into the yard. They used to get up at 5am to go down to the sea and swim, and be back in time for work at 9. I am planning to use these and other stories in the show to give viewers a perspective of the island that is more concrete and specific than just white sand and palm trees. What would you been interested in learning about the experience of growing up and growing old in Antigua? I have many more conversations planned in preperation for this piece.

Newgate Street, Antigua - c.1902

Newgate Street, Antigua - c.1902

Roadtrip to Rochester Art Center

This past Saturday my friend Tiana and I took a road trip down to Rochester so that I could check out the space at the  Rochester Art Center where my show will be. It was beautiful day for a drive, with the sun shining down on the open spaces of southern Minnesota.

Dave Chappelle and A Tribe Called Quest on SNL


Last week we saw a very special SNL one after the election. We saw comedy legend Dave Chappelle hosting for the first time as part of his return to public life, and Hiphop legends A Tribe Called Quest as the musical guests supporting “We Got It From Here … Thank You 4 Your Service,” their most recent and final album after an almost 18 year wait. 

Black America Again

The latest entry in a long list of powerful music based projects by black artists, that fully engage the complex and historically significant issues we face in society today. Common's Black America Again is out now. I'd encourage you to check out the full album. 

Theaster Gates

Right now I'm trying to write about what my art means and what I want it to become in the next few years. I've discovered that the art of Theaster Gates, the work he's doing in Chicago neighborhoods, and how he thinks about art and the world is very much the direction I want to be moving in. Art matters and it relates to everything. It's a long video, but I find it fascinating. also check out his TED talk  to understand a part of his practice.

How We Got Here: New Work By Cameron Jarvis and Miranda Moen

I needed a few days to recover after hanging the show in Chatfield and having the opening day. It was a big success and I'm finally getting around to sharing pictures. It was really nice to collaborate with Miranda and to look at a place from somebody else's perspective. I'd Also like to thank Tom Hilgren and everybody else at the Chatfield Center for the Arts who worked hard to get the gallery space constructed and helped us organize the show. I'll probably write a longer reflection about the  show and the collaboration sometime next week but no promises.

The 1916 gallery is open:

Thursday 4pm - 6pm

Friday 4pm - 8pm

Saturday 11am - 4pm

Sunday 11am - 4pm

Large Squares

Just as traveling by car is a good way to experience the US highway system, and delivering pizzas was a good way to experience the city streets of Saint Peter at night, I am hoping that biking will be a good way to experience a lot of the county roads that divide up the farmland near my house in Cottage Grove. Still thinking about moving through space. 

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Goodbye Rainbow

Rainbow Foods on East Point Douglas Road in Cottage Grove was knocked down to make way for a Hi-Vee. It's interesting how it doesn't take much height for a building to completely define your experience of a place by enclosing you in a defined space. Rainbow Foods, and more specifically the fact that you can't see any part of the block behind it was a distinct part of my childhood here in Cottage Grove. It was not a large part and never took up much space in my memory, but it was a very concrete and well defined thing that could not have been any other way.  My parents tell me it used to be a K-Mart.

Fall events

I have artwork in several shows this month, so I thought I should run down all of the details here here where you obviously are interested in looking. Please pass on these events to anyboy you know who might be interested. You can always check my News and Events page for what's going on, or if you want the news delivered to you, sign up for my email newsletter. I will send you absolutely no chain letters! It's not the early 2000s. Well it is but we are past that as a species. Mostly. 

Exhibition with Miranda Moen at Chatfield Center for the Arts in Chatfield, MN

I am happy to be collaborating with Minneapolis architectural designer Miranda Moen to presentHow We Got Here, an exhibition at theChatfield Center for the Arts in Chatfield, Minnesota. The building that houses the historic Potter Auditorium is undergoing major renovations and a new gallery space has been constructed as part of the renovations. Our show, which is open September 17 - October 14 will be the inaugural exhibition. Join us for a reception on Saturday, September 17, 10am - 12pm.
 

 

Group exhibition at Heyde Center for the Arts in Chippewa Falls, WI

My prints Stop Here and Slow Here have been included in Land: Mine, an exhibition at theHyde Center for the Arts in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin. The exhibition, co-curated by Eau Claire artists Lori Chilefone and Jyl Kelley, features visual, musical and performance art by more than 30 artists. The pieces in the show are inspired by our changing natural landscapes, and focus on the different ways in which we interact with our surroundings. The exhibition is on viewSeptember 1 -  October 14 and will feature an artists reception on September 9 from 4 - 8pm.

Exhibition at Hudson Hospital and Clinic in Hudson, WI Aug 17 - Nov 13

For those who missed my exhibition in Saint Peter last May, you can see many of the pieces I showed at Hudson Hospital and Clinic as part of the Healing Arts Program, a collaboration between Hudson Hospital and The Phipps Center for the Arts. My work is on display in theMedical Office Building Lobby from August 17 - November 13. You are invited to group reception for all the 2016-17 exhibition artists on Friday, November 4. More information about the reception will be available closer to the date. You can read more about the Healing Arts Program here.

Sons Of Kemet - In The Castle Of My Skin

Sons Of Kemet - 'Lest We Forget What We Came Here To Do' Released 25th September on Naim Jazz Records Available Via: Naim Label: http://bit.ly/1OOptGM iTunes: http://apple.co/1NK75hd Amazon: http://amzn.to/1QWZv2Z Bandcamp: http://bit.ly/1OOptGM Sons Of Kemet are: Shabaka Hutchings - tenor saxophone, bass clarinet Theon Cross - tuba Tom Skinner - drums

I'm back home after a fantastic month at the Anderson Center in Red Wing. I've returned to work and am getting back into the swing of things. I don't think I will be posting as frequently during these weeks leading up to the show in Chatfield on the 17th, but stay tuned for more details about the opening. There are a few more shows that I am involved in at the moment, and you can read up on them by visiting my News and Events page. Once I things have settled after the show I have some plans for interesting new content for the blog. Have a good Labor Day weekend!

I moved out of the Anderson Center this morning and am back home in Cottage Grove. Here is a drawing I did of the granary at the Center that houses the printing studio.

Last day at Anderson Center

Today is my final day at the Anderson Center. I spent the day packing the last of my things and conducting exit interview with the director, Chris. This month has been a really productive and an opportunity to learn. I thought I should just list some thoughts and reflections in list form, because that's what I do best.

  • Having a dedicated studio space has been invaluable to generating and refining ideas. 
  • I really want to develop a better method for making linocut prints. I had a lot of trouble with creating multi-layerd prints because of blocks that are difficult to keep clean. I'll keep you posted.
  • I came in thinking that this month would be just about creating a large volume of work, but instead I've taken the time to relax and think, while still creating work.
  • The mosquitos here have been kind of bad in the woods and at dusk. Then we had a few days of heavy rain and the river got really high, and for the past week they have been TERRIBLE ALL THE TIME! 
  • I've been appreciating the value of having conversations with creative people in different disciplines. There is one other painter in residence this month, and the rest are writers. It has been really cool to learn about an art form that I haven't experienced much, and learning how to talk about writing and its process.
  • I've decided I need a hobby. Art has turned into more of a profession in the last few years, and while still enjoy it, I can't rely on it as a means of stress relief.
  • I've decided my new hobby is going to be biking. I recently bought a road bike and I'm excited to start riding. I figure I should start a few habits to stay healthy before I'm middle aged, and I'm never going to run, so...
  • I love having lots of tables in my workspace so I can spread out.
  • New York is a great but difficult place to live (I learned a lot from talking to the three New York Residents)
  • I'm excited to wrap up these last shows this fall and take a break from painting to just read and think for a few months.
  • Hanisch Bakery in Red Wing makes really good doughnuts. 
  • I'll write more when I've had more time to reflect.