New public art in Alexandria frames 300 years of African American history

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New public art in Alexandria frames 300 years of African American history
Olalekan Jeyifous standing with Wrought, Knit, Labors, Legacies. Photo by Ja’Mon Jackson for City of Alexandria.



ALEXANDRIA, VA.- The City of Alexandria presents its newest public art installation, Wrought, Knit, Labors, Legacies, in Alexandria’s Waterfront Park (1 Prince St.). This new temporary installation by Olalekan Jeyifous is the second in the Site See: New Views in Old Town annual public art series, and will be on display through November 2020. It follows SOFTlab’s 2019 Mirror Mirror installation.

Wrought, Knit, Labors, Legacies frames Alexandria’s African American history through the lens of the city’s merchant and manufacturing industries of the 17th to 20th centuries. Once a prosperous port city that was home to one of the largest domestic slave-trading firms in the country, Alexandria was a major center for shipping and manufacturing with an economy inextricably tied to the labor of enslaved and free African Americans.

A ground mural echoes African American quilting and textile traditions using icons that represent some of Alexandria’s historic industries: fishing, flour, tobacco and railways. From this colorful surface, four large, ornate metal profiles face the water, wrapped in sculptural seating and illuminated in low light.




In the fall, a series of commissioned performances inspired by Wrought, Knit, Labors, Legacies will complement the art installation at Waterfront Park. The series will feature poets and spoken-word artists curated by Alexandria’s Poet Laureate KaNikki Jakarta, as well as movement-based performances by Tariq O’Meally. The performances will follow applicable physical distancing and health guidance.

The Site See temporary public art and performance series highlights Waterfront Park as a civic space and is informed by the historic waterfront and neighboring community. Jeyifous was commissioned in 2019 to create this original site-specific work and was selected by a community task force with the Alexandria Commission for the Arts’ approval.

Based in Brooklyn, Jeyifous along with Amanda Williams, are co-creating the monument for Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm in Brooklyn. The Architectural League recently honored him as one of 2020’s Emerging Voices.

In 2021, the Site See series will feature work by Mark Reigelman.

Olalekan Jeyifous received a bachelor’s of architecture degree from Cornell University. His work has been exhibited at the Studio Museum in Harlem, the MoMA, the Vitra Design Museum and the Guggenheim in Bilbao, Spain. He received grants and fellowships from the New York Foundation of the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts and the Brooklyn Arts Council. He has completed artist residencies with the Headlands Center for the Arts, Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts and the Drawing Center’s Open Sessions program, and was named a Wilder Green Fellow at the MacDowell Colony.










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