TREASURED CIGAR BOX designed byApril Martin Chartrand (2012) 2 of 2

Saturday, August 24, 2013

April Martin Chartrand in a SF Gate article: Reflecting the Light: Works Inspired by Black Masters - Afro Solo Arts Festival 20

"Highwaymen" Florida's Traveling '26' designed by April Martin Chartrand is in an article in SF Gate.

'Reflecting Light: Works Inspired by Black Masters'


When curator Michael Ross set out to gather the art for AfroSolo Arts Festival's "Reflecting the Light: Works Inspired by Black Masters," he couldn't have predicted some of the striking parallels between the contemporary artists in the exhibit and the forebears they pay tribute to.
Bay Area artist Candi Farlice, for instance, met Noah Purifoy, the artist she honors, as a teenager in L.A., where she grew up. Known for his assemblages of burnt wood and debris from the 1965 Watts riots, his work founding the Watts Towers Art Center and later his remarkable installations in the Mojave, Purifoy was a source of fascination for the young Farlice, who picked up where he left off when she embarked on her sculptural work shortly after the George Zimmerman verdict and the protests that followed.
Much as Purifoy collected charred materials for his "66 Signs of Neon," she writes in her artist's statement, "I gather in my work as well, and in that spirit of Noah, I gathered in the wake of Trayvon Martin."

"It was certainly not planned," says Ross, 50. "But it was kind of amazing how those two resonated."
Farlice's work is joined by Ramekon O'Arwisters' tchotchke-and-puzzle-piece-studded "Planned Obsolescence," an homage to Gregory Warmack, the artist better known as Mr. Imagination, who covered his work with bottle caps, and Ron Sanders' "Invisible Man Sepia Flag," its dreadlocked figure dropping a shadow in front of a flipped Old Glory in a tip of the hat to Gordon Parks' "American Gothic."

William Rhodes confronts famed San Francisco artist Sargent Johnson, who carved the entrance and created the mosaic mural at San Francisco Maritime Museum, with "The Bull," painted with enamel paint on window glass, whereas April Martin Chartrand pays respect to the Florida landscape artists who went by the moniker the Highwaymen and sold paintings from the trunks of their cars.
The notion of giving a nod to the ancestors of African American art emerged from talks between Ross and AfroSolo director Thomas Simpson, who remembers discovering once-forgotten black artists in the late '80s and '90s, as a painter fresh out of graduate school.
"There are a few artist names that we hear all the time," Ross says, "but it's amazing when young artists discover that there were so many more. So we wanted to see what artists would do and who they had in mind to pay homage to or, as we call it, reflecting the light or reflecting on an artist ancestor."

Ross was pleased to see his enthusiasm was contagious as artists came up with names beyond his initial list. "It was organic," says the curator, who contributed his own painting referencing William H. Johnson, "and that was exciting."

If you go

Reflecting the Light: Works Inspired by Black Masters: Through Oct. 15; reception 1:30-4 p.m. Sept. 15. Noon-5 p.m. Sunday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday and Saturday, 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday and noon-6 p.m. Friday. San Francisco Main Library, African American Center, third floor, 100 Larkin St., S.F. (415) 771-2376. www.afrosolo.org.
Kimberly Chun is a Berkeley writer. E-mail: 96hours@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @kimberlychun
http://www.sfgate.com/art/article/Reflecting-Light-Works-Inspired-by-Black-4733552.php

Friday, July 26, 2013

Afro Solo Art Festival 20 features "Highwaymen: Florida's Traveling '26' Designed by April Martin Chartrand

I am in an an art show presented by Afro Solo Art Festival 20 and my work will feature the "Highwaymen: Florida's Traveling '26'  Designed by April Martin Chartrand

The show takes place August 15-October 15, 2013

Visual Arts Exhibit, Reflecting the Light: Works Inspired by Black Masters.
Curated by Michael Ross,
 

Artist Reception September 15, 2013, 1:30 to 4 pm
San Francisco Main Public Library, 

100 Larkin Street at Grove, SF.
Free and open to the public

In collaboration with San Francisco’s Main Public Library we will present a multi-disciplined visual arts show that pays homage to many of the Black arts masters; some of whom are frequently mentioned in the narratives of art and history, and some whose names rarely surface in those
narratives.
  

Featured artists:
April Martin Chartrand, Candi Farlice, Idris Hassan, Virginia Jourdan, William Rhodes, Ron Saunders, and Wanda Whitaker. 

Sunday, May 12, 2013

New Artwork 2013: HIGHWAYMEN: Florida's Traveling '26' Designed by April Martin Chartrand


2013: New Artwork Inspired by the Unsung African-American Icons

 HIGHWAYMEN:  Florida's Traveling '26
Designed by April Martin Chartrand

These 4 pieces were inspired by four of the '26' original Highwaymen Artists
1)  Harold Newton | 1934-1994
2)  Mary Ann Carroll | 1940-present
3) Alfred Hair | 1941-1970
4) Livingston (Castro) Robert | 1941-2004

Learn more about these unsung American Icons through the PBS special:
http://www.kqed.org/news/story/2012/07/04/100168/the_highwaymen_segregation_and_speedpainting_in_the_sunshine?source=npr&category=u.s

NOTE:  This art is in no way connected to the original Highwaymen. I have been in contact with Ms. Mary Ann Carroll via the phone and email to inform her that I was researching the Highwaymen and found some alleged inappropriate usage of their names, alleged fraudulent  arts sales by collectors/self-appointed curators/Ebay etc/You Tube) , and many other alleged stealing of their work and names.

Treasured Cigar Box Assemblage Explorations of the African Diaspora by April Martin Chartrand - Video

California African American Museum 
presents
Treasured Cigar Box
Assemblage Explorations of the African Diaspora
Designed by April Martin Chartrand
                                                            October 6 -March 31, 2013

Video Link for the exhibition set up:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-tR8zi9lUT4&feature=share&list=UU4UYmpTxBVsY_dt7rg7MXRw 




Sunday, February 17, 2013

"Transformative Visions 2013" March 9 - April 8th, 2013 - April Martin Chartrand is one of many featured artist


April Martin Chartrand is one of the featured visual artists  in the group art show in the 


"Transformative Visions 2013" 


For a video preview of last years show:   http://youtu.be/9V9UXCSvwFA

WHAT: A multimedia arts event lifting up a vision of peace, justice, healing,
and possibility for our communities and our world.

WHERE: Studio One Art Center, 365 - 45th St., Oakland
WHEN:  Opening event: Saturday, March 16th, 2-5PM.
WHEN:  Art exhibit on display 3/9 - 4/8

  • LIVE JAZZ with musical all stars The Destiny Muhammad Project, plus special
  • guests, pianist Tammy Hall, and Sistahs of the Drum!
  • VISUAL ART EXHIBIT featuring more than 20 Bay Area artists! 3/9 - 4/8
  • Dynamic SPOKEN WORD performers!
PRODUCED BY: OneLife Institute, with support from the San Francisco Foundation,
Studio One Art Center, and Harpist from the Hood.



 Photo:  April Martin Chartrand, Copyright 2013


Tuesday, February 5, 2013

April Martin Chartrand, will exhibit her Treasured Cigar Box March - April 2013

Transformative Visions 2013
ART SHOW | SPOKEN WORD | JAZZ CONCERT
   A multimedia arts event lifting up a vision of peace, justice, and possibility for our community and our world.

Multi-Media Group Art Exhibition
 March 9th - April 6, 2013
Location:  
Studio One
365 - 45th St., Oakland, CA 94609
Hours:  http://www.studiooneartcenter.net/


April Martin Chartrand,  will exhibit her
Treasured Cigar Box
Assemblage Explorations of the African Diaspora

Note:  Other artists to be announced  check website
http://www.onelifeinstitute.org/transformativevisions.html 

'Angel's Destiny' is archived @ San Francisco State University's Poetry Center

'Angel's Destiny: A Novel Story of Poems & Illustrations' by April Martin Chartrand -  is archived @ San Francisco State University's Poetry Center

San Francisco State University's Poetry Center

1600 Holloway Ave., Humanities (HUM) 510

San Francisco, CA 94132


If you at the school, stop by the center to read my book (two copies are available for reading at the archives).

Questions:

phone: 415 338 2227
fax: 415 338 0966
email: poetry@sfsu.edu


http://www.sfsu.edu/~poetry/awards/bookaward.html