How an artist became the queen of Baltimore
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, November 16, 2024


How an artist became the queen of Baltimore
Installation view.

by Aruna D’Souza



BALTIMORE, MD.- Joyce J. Scott is not an easy woman to interview. It’s not that she is reticent. It’s just hard to get a word in edgewise because practically every person we passed during our day together in Baltimore stopped to talk to her, shouting out “The Queen!” or “Mama Joyce!” whenever we entered one of her local haunts.

She responded with enthusiasm, warmth and a comedic gift for working the crowd, slipping into different characters (a spoiled child, a haughty intellectual, a tough guy), bantering, wisecracking and generally making people laugh.

These interactions speak volumes about Scott, 75, who uses humor as much as art — weaving and quilted textile work; elaborate beaded jewelry; sculptures that combine beads, glass and found objects; intricately constructed clothing; printmaking, installation and performance art — to open up difficult conversations about race and inequality and to build community in her hometown.

“It might not be an exaggeration to say she’s the defining artist of Baltimore,” Lowery Stokes Sims, her longtime friend and curator of her work, said in a recent phone call. “She was born here, raised here, went to school here, went out into the world but always had this place as a base. She never left.”

For the past several months, the city has been in full-on celebration mode for this MacArthur “genius” award-winning artist. The Baltimore Museum of Art (known as the BMA) has mounted a 50-year retrospective of Scott’s work, titled “Walk a Mile in My Dreams,” which runs through July 14 before traveling this fall to the Seattle Art Museum, its co-organizing institution. It includes nearly 140 objects from the 1970s to the present, a new installation, a music video and freshly unearthed documentation of her performance work. (Scott’s first BMA retrospective was in 2000.) Additionally, two exhibitions at Goya Contemporary, her longtime art gallery, focus on Scott’s printmaking and a large-scale glasswork made in collaboration with Washington, D.C.-based artist Tim Tate.

The retrospective has been augmented by eight satellite exhibitions around town devoted to her mother, Elizabeth Talford Scott (1916-2011), a textile artist who drew upon and expanded African American traditions of quiltmaking, and who was an essential influence on her daughter’s work. Organized by students from the Maryland Institute College of Art, Joyce Scott’s alma mater, partners included the Reginald F. Lewis Museum, the Maryland Center for History and Culture, and JELMA of Morgan State University.

Talking about the number of exhibitions, Scott said, with a self-deprecating laugh, “We have bum-rushed my hometown in true Baltimore style!”

Roots Running Deep

Scott has traveled the world, completing her master’s degree in Mexico, doing residencies at a Murano glassmaking studio, learning appliqué techniques from Indigenous Kuna women on the San Blas islands in Panama, and teaching beading workshops in South Africa, but her Baltimore roots run deep.

Her parents were born into sharecropping families in the Carolinas, her mother on land where her grandparents had been enslaved; they migrated to West Baltimore, where they met, and Joyce was born in 1948. Elizabeth Talford Scott was employed in private homes as a housekeeper and nanny, doing her creative work in her spare time.

Elizabeth would sit under a quilting frame set up in her home as a child, pushing needles back up to her mother and other relatives as they stitched, listening to their conversations. Joyce in turn learned about the craft from her mother — its long history, stretching back to West Africa and a time before the horrors of the slave trade, its techniques, its communal nature, its value not only as a means to create beautiful and utilitarian textiles but to record cultural histories. She often refers to these lessons, as well as the connection she feels to traditions that linked her to ancestors in Africa, as her “inheritance.”

Joyce Scott has lived in Upton, on the city’s west side, for 50 years, in a row house she shared with her mother until the elder Scott’s death in 2011. The two worked side by side in adjoining studios.

“Our entire house was festive. If a washcloth was torn, she would embroider it to make it beautiful,” she said. “This comes from people who make their way where there is no way, have-nots making something out of nothing.” A quilt the women worked on together, “Monsters, Dragons, and Flies” (1982), is featured in the retrospective, as are a number of Scott’s weavings and textile works that riff on the assemblage nature of quiltmaking.

When they first arrived, she said, Upton was safe, thriving and vibrant, but like many predominantly Black neighborhoods in big cities, it was especially hard-hit by the loss of jobs in the 1970s and 1980s. Signs of economic distress are everywhere, including abandoned row houses and boarded-up businesses, but so are hints of persistence and revival. Nearby is Druid Hill Park, the site of two of Scott’s public art works, including one in which she filled in a formerly segregated swimming pool with dirt and grass, and embellished it with tiles.

The stoop of her house has a bright purple door; her beadwork sculptures hang in the front window. Neighbors come by to say hello and to tell her how great she looks as a photographer takes her portrait.

“The pictures are for my parole officer,” she shot back, teasing. She was matter-of-fact when she pointed out the group of young people gathered on the corner selling drugs. “I’ve always worked within my community. I’m not afraid of my peeps,” she said.

The Trickster

Humor is key to how she engages both personally and artistically. Leslie King-Hammond, an art historian and longtime champion of Scott’s art, calls her “a trickster in the West African mold.”

“The beauty or the humor in her work draws you in, and while you’re in there having a good time, she drops the mic on you,” she said. “Laugh if you want, but understand there is a price to be paid in that laughter.”

Indeed, looking at Scott’s 8-inch-long beaded sculpture Man Eating Watermelon (1986), you may marvel at her skillful use of a Native American beading technique called the peyote stitch, which she learned from Muscogee (Creek) artist Sandy Fife Wilson in the 1970s. You may laugh at the work’s punning title: What we have here is not in fact a man eating a watermelon but a man-eating watermelon. Then the discomfort sneaks up on you. The fruit, at the heart of many racist tropes, is a recurring object of Scott’s scathing critique. She is also nodding to tchotchkes, still available for purchase in parts of the country, that “humorously” showed Black babies being used as alligator bait.

Other beaded sculptures in the show address the long history of “mammy” imagery, lynching, the beating of Rodney King, the persecution of people with albinism in Tanzania, and gun violence. Some of these incorporate blown glass, a medium Scott adopted after working with artisans at the Pilchuck Glass School in Washington state and in Murano, Italy. Combining glass with beading, found objects and other materials allowed her to work on a larger scale and introduce qualities of transparency and reflection.

Her intricate necklaces, which often represent social justice issues, brought her early recognition.

“If you wear something about racism, about hunger in Africa, then you have to be prepared to have a conversation,” she said. “The viewer’s going to ask you about it.” Some of her collectors welcome such conversations. “Others tell me that they leave their pieces at home because they can’t handle it.”

And then there is “Thunder Thigh Revue,” Scott’s theatrical collaboration with actor and director Kay Lawal-Muhammad, modeled after early-20th-century vaudeville shows — part feminist activism and part slapstick comedy. (Their tagline was “Comedy at Large/Pathos Thinly Veiled.”) The pair traveled throughout the U.S. and in Europe between 1985 and 1990, offering up skits that addressed such topics as fat phobia, white beauty standards and date rape. Film critic Roger Ebert was among their fans. Speaking of what accounted for the venture’s success, Lawal-Muhammad said, “I think the truthfulness of it, the exaggerated humor of it, but most of all the poignancy of it.”

Scott has said that her work in performance was an attempt to convey her message in a new medium. It also had a practical dimension. “We were taught to never depend upon one line of income,” she said.

Art as a Way of Living

In 2015, protests erupted in Upton after the death of Freddie Gray while in police custody.

“I could look out from my second-floor window and see the people marching down North Avenue and the preachers in a circle praying,” Scott recalled. “That was very deep.”

The events spurred her to action. “The next morning, I gathered up the kids on the block and went to ‘the Bishop’ — Scott’s nickname for a property owner in the neighborhood — “and said, ‘Do you have a house I can use?’ He put a big table and chairs in one of his places, and I got people in the community to come in and do beadwork with me.” Together, they processed the momentousness of the events — and connected across generations.

Scott is constantly thinking about how to manage the contradiction between making art that is trying to effect social change and showing it in places like museums and art galleries, where many people may not feel comfortable or welcome, King-Hammond, the art historian, said. “Joyce is not happy unless she has community involvement.”

Recently Scott invited neighbors to come see her show; some had never gone to the museum before. “She was a bridge for them to feel like they belonged in this space,” said Cecilia Wichmann of the BMA, a curator of the retrospective.

It features a room where visitors can contribute to collective weaving projects; they will be finished by Scott before being auctioned to support a scholarship in her name at the Maryland Institute College of Art. Two of the looms are simply upturned schoolroom tables, with the legs supporting the warp and weft threads — a trick Scott used over the years while teaching in after-school programs with shoestring budgets.

“She sees her life as an artist as modeling for others another way of being and living,” said Catharina Manchanda, a curator at the Seattle Art Museum. “She has an incredibly strong conviction that every artwork has a role in bringing people together and offering people an opportunity to learn together, but she also models a whole new way of being an artist within a community. It’s not as much a career for her as a way of life.”



‘Joyce J. Scott: Walk a Mile in My Dreams’

Through July 14 at the Baltimore Museum of Art, 10 Art Museum Drive, Baltimore; 443-573-1700, artbma.org.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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